Trump set for China tariff announcement on Thursday,
trade war fears grow
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[March 22, 2018]
By David Chance and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump will announce tariffs on Chinese imports on Thursday, a White
House official said, in a move aimed at curbing theft of U.S. technology
and likely to trigger retaliation from Beijing and stoke fears of a
global trade war.
There was no indication of the size and scope of the tariffs, which U.S.
Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said on Wednesday would target
China's high-technology sector and could also include restrictions on
Chinese investments in the United States. Other sectors like apparel
could also be hit.
"Tomorrow the president will announce the actions he has decided to take
based on USTR’s 301 investigation into China’s state-led,
market-distorting efforts to force, pressure, and steal U.S.
technologies and intellectual property," the official said.
The White House said Trump would sign a presidential memorandum
"targeting China’s economic aggression" at 12:30 p.m. (1630 GMT) on
Thursday.
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The investigation by the United States under Section 301 of the 1974
Trade Act has identified theft from and coercion of U.S. companies to
disclose their intellectual property as well as purchases by Chinese
state funds of U.S. companies for their technology knowledge.
Lighthizer told the House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee, a
top economic panel, that the aim would be to minimize the impact of any
tariffs on U.S. consumers.
China has threatened to retaliate by hitting U.S. agricultural exports
if tariffs on Chinese imports worth up to $60 billion are announced by
Washington.
"The remedies, in my judgment at least, would be one, doing something on
the tariff front, and two, doing something on the investment front, and
then perhaps other things," said Lighthizer, a lawyer and veteran trade
negotiator.
The United States runs a hefty goods trade deficit with China of $375
billion. Estimates of the cost of counterfeit goods, pirated software
and theft of trade secrets could be as high as $600 billion, according
to one study.
Talk of a global trade war emerged earlier this month when Trump
announced hefty tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, aimed at hitting
Chinese overproduction, but which could also affect key allies like
members of the European Union.
Lighthizer conceded that China would likely hit back with measures on
U.S. agricultural exports, particularly soybeans, and said if that
happened, Washington would impose "counter-measures," although he said
that "nobody wins from a trade war," a stance that appeared to put him
at odds with Trump who has termed trade wars "good and easy to win".
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Since taking office, Trump has taken a hard line on trade, abandoning a
14-nation Pacific trade pact and threatening to pull out of the North
American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico.
He has also attacked Germany, saying it hides behind tariffs to win an
export advantage for its car industry.
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Scale flies off of a steel coil as it is unrolled on the line at the
Novolipetsk Steel PAO steel mill in Farrell, Pennsylvania, U.S.,
March 9, 2018. Picture taken March 9, 2018. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk
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The administration has been forced to walk back some of its steel and aluminum
measures, granting exemptions to Canada and Mexico and entering talks with the
European Union and others to discuss potential exemptions.
CHINA STEELS ITSELF FOR RESPONSE
China has already identified agriculture as a U.S. weak point and has said it
would target soybeans, a $14 billion-a- year business. America's farm states
heavily backed Trump in his presidential election win.
"China does not want to fight a trade war with anyone. But if anyone forces us
to fight one, we will neither be scared nor hide," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Hua Chunying said.
"If, in the end, the United States takes actions that harm China's interests
then China will have to take resolute and necessary steps to respond to protect
our legitimate interests."
The European Union's response to the threat of steel and aluminum tariffs also
targeted areas where Republicans are vulnerable, threatening Harley-Davidson
motorcycles, which are made in House Speaker Paul Ryan's home state of
Wisconsin.
While China has stepped up its rhetoric, it is far from clear that Beijing is
ready to take the next step and move to an economic confrontation that would pit
the world's two leading economic powers against each other.
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Financial markets reacted to the Trump steel and aluminum tariffs with an
initial sharp sell-off, although they have since regained their poise.
A global trade war would have much harsher economic consequences, possibly
hitting the dollar, U.S. stock markets and currencies as varied as the Mexican
peso and the Australian dollar, according to analysis from investment bank
Morgan Stanley.
A targeted use of Section 301 that covered $60 billion of Chinese high-tech
products could see a response from China that is relatively muted, the bank said
in a report, with agriculture and transport equipment being hit in return,
"This would have a moderate impact on growth in both the U.S. and China," it
said.
The risk of an escalation in which there were a broad-based tariff across a
range of Chinese goods followed by a response from Beijing that was commensurate
with that would cause a hit to U.S. and Chinese growth, a rise in U.S. inflation
and possibly prompt China to take domestic action to boost growth.
(Additional reporting by David Lawder in Washington and Stella Qiu and Ryan Woo
in Beijing; Editing by Alistair Bell and Peter Cooney)
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