US
releases $200bn list of Chinese products for possible new tariffs
10
July, 2018
Accusing
China of not negotiating “seriously” on trade, the Trump
administration has released a list of products it wants to impose a
ten percent tariff on, amounting to $200 billion. The new tariffs
would kick in within 60 days.
The
200-page document,
released on Tuesday by the US Trade Representative’s office, gives
notice to those who wish to comment on the proposal and lists
hundreds of products that would be subjected to the new tariffs. The
Trump administration intends to impose a ten percent duty on the
products listed, Reuters reported, citing US Trade Representative
Robert Lighthizer.
The
Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) was quick to condemn the
proposal, saying it will punish American consumers.
“The
President has broken his promise to bring ‘maximum pain on China,
minimum pain on consumers,’ and American families are the ones
being punished,” Hun
Quach, RILA VP of international trade, said in
a statement. “Consumers,
businesses and the American jobs dependent on trade, are left in the
crosshairs of an escalating global trade war.”
Senate
Finance Committee chair Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) also took aim at the
announced list, saying it “appears
reckless and is not a targeted approach.”
“We
cannot turn a blind eye to China’s mercantilist trade practices,
but this action falls short of a strategy that will give the
administration negotiating leverage with China while maintaining the
long-term health and prosperity of the American
economy,” Hatch said in
a statement.
The
Senate intends to vote on Wednesday on a nonbinding measure that
would insert provisions requiring Congressional approval of tariffs
into water and energy “minibus” spending bills, Senator Jeff
Flake (R-Arizona) told Bloomberg.
US
tariffs of 25 percent on $34 billion of Chinese imports went into
effect on July 6. Beijing has retaliated with duties on the same
value of US imports, ranging from soybeans to cars, and has vowed to
respond proportionally to any new US tariffs.
Last
week, President Donald Trump said the US might ultimately impose
tariffs on more than $500 billion worth of Chinese goods, almost the
total amount of US imports from China last year.
China's
Commerce Ministry has said that Beijing has no choice but to fight
back after the US “launched
the largest trade war in economic history,” accusing
Washington of violating the rules of the World Trade Organization
(WTO).
Trump
has campaigned on the claim that trade partners are taking advantage
of Americans due to “terrible
deals” made
by previous US presidents. His determination to renegotiate trade
deals has targeted not only competitors on the world market such as
China, but longtime friends and allies such as the EU or Canada.
“Sometimes
our friends, when it comes to trade, are treating us worse than the
enemies,” Trump
said at a press conference on June 29.
His
administration has already imposed tariffs on aluminum and steel
imports from the EU, Mexico and Canada at
the end of May,
prompting Ottawa to retaliate in kind against some US exports.
For
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