Trump to slap 10% tariff on $200 bn of Chinese goods ,Beijing to retaliate

Trump is barreling ahead with his vow to punish China for alleged unfair trading practices, despite an invitation this month from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to restart trade talks with Beijing

trade war
Photo: Shutterstock
Saleha Mohsin and Jenny Leonard | Bloomberg
Last Updated : Sep 17 2018 | 8:42 PM IST
The Trump administration will announce as early as Monday that it’s imposing a 10 percent tariff on $200 billion of Chinese goods, which Beijing has already said it will retaliate against, according to three people familiar with the decision.
 
The rate is less than half of the 25 percent level the administration had initially been considering. Still, American consumers could start feeling the cost of the tariffs for everyday goods, as the latest move brings all Chinese imports subject to a new tariff to $250 billion, roughly half of China’s shipments to the US last year.

 
President Donald Trump is barreling ahead with his vow to punish China for alleged unfair trading practices, despite an invitation this month from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to restart trade talks with Beijing. Chinese officials have signaled they’ll refuse to meet with Mnuchin if this next round of tariffs is imposed, according to two people familiar with the discussions.
 
The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday that the U.S. plans to impose 10 percent tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods in the coming days and they will take effect within weeks. The White House had no immediate comment on Monday.
 

American businesses have come out strongly against the tariffs, saying they have the potential of raising retail prices. Apple Inc. said last month the proposed duties on $200 billion cover a wide range of products used in its US operations.
 
Stocks Lower

U.S. stock futures edged lower, Asian equities slumped and European shares fluctuated amid investor concerns a heightened trade war will crimp corporate profits and undermine economic growth. The dollar declined.
 
The president early on Monday seemed to undermine any efforts for a negotiated solution, saying tariffs have bolstered the US bargaining position, while cost increases to consumers have been negligible and warned of more levies.
 
“Tariffs have put the US in a very strong bargaining position, with Billions of Dollars, and Jobs, flowing into our Country - and yet cost increases have thus far been almost unnoticeable," Trump said on Twitter. "If countries will not make fair deals with us, they will be ‘Tariffed!’"
 
The administration since July has already slapped 25 percent tariffs on $50 billion of Chinese goods, sparking immediate in-kind retaliation. China has said it will respond to the next round of US levies with retaliatory tariffs on $60 billion of U.S goods ranging from liquefied natural gas to aircraft.
 

Distance Beijing

Heaping more duties on Chinese goods will only further distance Beijing from resolving the conflict through a negotiated solution, said one of the people.
 
The lack of unity within the US administration on trade isn’t new -- Chinese and American officials have held a series of talks over the dispute, and reached at least one agreement which was subsequently abandoned by the president. The lack of progress and collapse of that deal have made future negotiations more difficult, as it’s unclear who speaks for the US administration and there’s a lack of confidence that any deal will be honored.
 
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow has indicated that Trump could be willing to meet face-to-face with China President Xi Jinping to smooth over trade tensions at the United Nations General Assembly later this month or at the Group of 20 nation summit in Argentina in November.
 
Economists at UBS Group AG say even a 10 percent tariff would slow the US economy in the fourth quarter by enough to stop the Federal Reserve hiking interest rates again in December.
 
 

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