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				Lighthizer said in a statement criticizing China's "egregious" 
				tariffs on U.S. autos that he was taking such action at the 
				direction of President Donald Trump.
 The statement came just days before Trump is due to meet Chinese 
				President Xi Jinping in Buenos Aires in a showdown that could 
				ease or worsen the trade war between the world's two largest 
				economies.
 
 Automotive duties on both sides have been increased by 
				tit-for-tat tariffs. The United States imposed a 25 percent 
				tariff on Chinese vehicles on top of the 2.5 percent it normally 
				charges.
 
 China had lowered tariffs for all other countries to 15 percent, 
				but imposed an additional 25 percent retaliatory tariff on U.S. 
				vehicles.
 
 Chinese auto exports to the United States are relatively small. 
				It exported 53,300 vehicles to the U.S. market last year and 
				imported 280,208 U.S. manufactured vehicles, according to data 
				from the China Automotive Technology and Research Center (CATARC), 
				a government-affiliated think-tank.
 
 Carmakers are already rearranging global production to absorb 
				the rising trade tensions between the world's two biggest 
				economies.
 
 Volvo, which is owned by Chinese carmaker Geely, plans to move 
				most of the production of its best-selling XC60 SUV for export 
				to the U.S. market away from its Chengdu plant in China to 
				Torslanda in Sweden.
 
 The Trump administration is seeking sweeping changes to China's 
				state-driven economic policies, including new protections for 
				U.S. intellectual property, an end to joint-venture 
				requirements, more access for U.S. firms to China's vast market 
				and cuts to China's industrial subsidies.
 
 "As the President has repeatedly noted, China's aggressive, 
				State-directed industrial policies are causing severe harm to 
				U.S. workers and manufacturers," Lighthizer said. "We are 
				continuing to raise these issues with China. As of yet, China 
				has not come to the table with proposals for meaningful reform."
 
 (Reporting by David Lawder; Additional reporting by Yilei Sun in 
				BEIJING; Editing by Peter Cooney and Darren Schuettler)
 
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