China slams U.S. 'blackmailing' as Trump issues new
trade threat
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[June 19, 2018]
By Michael Martina and Eric Beech
BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S.
President Donald Trump threatened to impose a 10 percent tariff on $200
billion of Chinese goods and Beijing warned it would retaliate, in a
rapid escalation of the trade conflict between the world's two biggest
economies.
Trump's latest move, as Washington fights trade battles on several
fronts, was unexpectedly swift and sharp.
It was retaliation, he said, for China's decision to raise tariffs on
$50 billion in U.S. goods, which came after Trump announced similar
tariffs on Chinese goods on Friday.
"After the legal process is complete, these tariffs will go into effect
if China refuses to change its practices, and also if it insists on
going forward with the new tariffs that it has recently announced,"
Trump said in a statement on Monday.
The comments sent global stock markets skidding and weakened both the
dollar and the Chinese yuan on Tuesday. Shanghai stocks plunged to
two-year lows.[MKTS/GLOB]
China's commerce ministry said Beijing will fight back with
"qualitative" and "quantitative" measures if the United States publishes
an additional list of tariffs on Chinese goods.
"Such a practice of extreme pressure and blackmailing deviates from the
consensus reached by both sides on multiple occasions," the ministry
said in a statement.
"The United States has initiated a trade war and violated market
regulations, and is harming the interests of not just the people of
China and the U.S., but of the world."
U.S. business groups said members were bracing for a backlash from the
Chinese government that would affect all American firms in China, not
just in sectors facing tariffs.
Jacob Parker, vice president of China operations at the U.S.-China
Business Council in Beijing, said China would undoubtedly “begin looking
at other ways to enforce action against U.S companies that are operating
in the market."
Some companies have reported Beijing is meeting with Chinese businesses
to discuss shifting contracts for U.S. goods and services to suppliers
from Europe or Japan, or to local Chinese firms, Parker said.
Washington and Beijing appeared increasingly headed toward open trade
conflict after several rounds of talks failed to resolve U.S. complaints
over Chinese industrial policies, lack of market access in China and a
$375 billion U.S. trade deficit.
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said his office was
preparing the proposed tariffs and they would undergo a similar legal
process as previous ones, which were subject to a public comment period,
a public hearing and some revisions. He did not say when the new target
list would be unveiled.
"As China hawks, like Lighthizer and (Peter) Navarro, appear to have
gained power within the Trump administration lately, an all-out trade
war now seems more inevitable," said Yasunari Ueno, chief market analyst
at Mizuho Securities in Japan.
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U.S. President Donald Trump addresses a meeting of the National
Space Council in the East Room of the White House in Washington,
U.S., June 18, 2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis
TIT-FOR-TAT
On Friday, Trump said he was pushing ahead with a 25 percent tariff on $50
billion worth of Chinese products, prompting Beijing to respond in kind.
Some of those tariffs will be applied from July 6, while the White House is
expected to announce restrictions on investments by Chinese companies in the
United States by June 30.
"China apparently has no intention of changing its unfair practices related to
the acquisition of American intellectual property and technology. Rather than
altering those practices, it is now threatening United States companies,
workers, and farmers who have done nothing wrong," Trump said.
Trump said if China increases its tariffs again in response to the latest U.S.
move, "we will meet that action by pursuing additional tariffs on another $200
billion of goods."
Trump said he has "an excellent relationship" with Chinese President Xi Jinping
and they "will continue working together on many issues."
But, he said, "the United States will no longer be taken advantage of on trade
by China and other countries in the world."
COOLING CHINESE ECONOMY
The intensifying trade row threatens to put more pressure on the already cooling
Chinese economy, risking an end to a rare spell of synchronized global expansion
and collateral damage for its export-reliant Asian neighbors.
China's central bank unexpectedly injected 200 billion yuan ($31 billion) in
medium-term funds into the banking system on Tuesday in a move analysts said
reflected concerns about liquidity but also the potential economic drag from a
full-blown trade war.
China imported $129.89 billion of U.S. goods last year, while the U.S. purchased
$505.47 billion of Chinese products, according to U.S. data.
Derek Scissors, a China scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a
Washington think tank, said that means China will soon run out of imports of
U.S. goods on which to impose retaliatory tariffs.
China was unlikely change its industrial policies in response to the U.S. trade
threats, he said. That could take a long and painful trade fight.
"As I've said from the beginning, China will back off its industrial plans only
when U.S. trade measures are large and lasting enough to threaten the influx of
foreign exchange. Not due to announcements," he said.
(Reporting by Eric Beech and David Lawder in WASHINGTON; Michael Martina and Ben
Blanchard in BEIJING; Additional reporting by Lee Chyen Yee in Singapore Writing
by Tony Munroe; Editing by Cynthia Osterman, Sandra Maler & Kim Coghill)
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