Trump's tariffs add to pandemic-induced turmoil of U.S.
manufacturers
Send a link to a friend
[April 30, 2020] By
Rajesh Kumar Singh
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Dan Digre, head of
MISCO Speakers, was on edge before the coronavirus outbreak hit the
global economy. Payment of hundreds of thousands of dollars in Chinese
tariffs had wiped out the profit and dwindled the cash balance of the
Minnesota-based loudspeaker maker.
Now Digre is grappling with dropping sales and payment delays. With cash
ever harder to come by, he must cough up the money for President Donald
Trump's 25% tariffs on parts that Digre imports from China for speakers
used in everything from mass transit systems and gaming devices to
essential ventilators and military equipment.
He is not alone. As a deepening economic recession dries up their
revenue streams, hundreds of import-dependent large and small businesses
are finding it tougher to survive the pandemic due to tariff costs.
"You are caught in a double bind," Digre said. "You need cash to operate
your business. At the same time, you are not getting cash in."
Despite a "Phase 1" deal, $370 billion of Chinese goods imported into
the United States are still subjected to tariffs of up to 25%.
Similarly, 25% tariffs on foreign steel and a 10% duty on aluminum
imports remain in place - taxes on American businesses at a time of
little revenue.
"Companies are paying taxes on goods that they can't sell right now for
the stay-at-home orders," said Jonathan Gold, spokesman for Americans
for Free Trade - a broad coalition of U.S. industry groups that lobby
against the tariffs.
Since March 2018, Trump has been employing tariffs as part of a
restrictive trade policy to rewrite terms that he says have destroyed
American industry and jobs.
Keeping tariffs in place on Chinese goods he says would maintain
leverage over China for a Phase 2 trade deal. Further relaxing the metal
tariffs could jeopardize domestic producers, according to some U.S.
steelmakers.
San Diego-based athleisure maker Vivacity Sportswear has been paying a
25% tariff on one-third of its raw materials that are sourced from
China, leading to a 15% drop in profit last year, CEO Vivian Sayward
said.
In the past two months, the company's revenue has dropped 80% and
inventory has increased by 60%. Shrinking profit margins and depressed
demand have compelled it to temporarily halt all manufacturing.
Lower demand has also prompted MISCO to stop all new shipments from
China. That will reduce its tariff expenses - but the company has to
find money to pay for the goods that are about to arrive or have reached
the United States.
NO BLANKET RELIEF
In a letter to the White House last month, executives of more than 350
American companies, including farm equipment maker CNH Industrial <CNHI.MI>,
retailers Macy's Inc <M.N>, Gap Inc <GPS.N> and J.C. Penney Co Inc <JCP.N>,
urged Trump to delay the collection of duties by 90 to 180 days to help
them preserve cash flow during the pandemic.
The calls for blanket relief have failed to gain traction.
In March, the Office of the United States Trade Representative took some
Chinese medical products off the tariff list. It has also asked
companies to file requests for duty exemptions for supplies that can be
effective in dealing with the coronavirus.
Earlier this month, the Trump administration allowed importers that have
faced a "significant" financial hardship due to the virus to delay
payment of tariffs for 90 days for goods imported in March and April.
The relief, however, will not be available to importers of Chinese goods
and steel and aluminum.
[to top of second column] |
Containers are loaded
onto a ship, as the global outbreak of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) continues, in the Port of Los Angeles, California, U.S.,
April 16, 2020. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
USTR did not respond to a request for comment.
Meanwhile, Gap has warned it may not survive the next 12 months intact, and J.C.
Penney has skipped an interest payment amid bankruptcy fears.
J.C. Penney declined to comment for this story. CNH Industrial, Gap and Macy's
did not respond to requests for comment.
"This (the pandemic) is an existential threat not (seen) since the Great
Depression," said Kip Eideberg, senior vice president of government and industry
relations at the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM), which represents
over 1,000 companies including Caterpillar Inc <CAT.N> and Deere & Co <DE.N>.
Since March 2018, U.S. importers have been billed about $59 billion in Chinese
and metal tariffs, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Data
compiled by consultancy Trade Partnership Worldwide, for trade group Tariffs
Hurt the Heartland, shows suspending the tariffs or delaying their payments
would free up as much as $3 billion of cash per month for U.S. companies.
SOARING CASH NEEDS
MISCO's president, Digre, has requested tariff exemption for the parts that are
used in the audio devices for ventilators but has yet to hear back from the
government. MISCO is one of the few companies that has retained U.S. production
long after other rivals moved production to Asia, primarily to China.
However, the 25% tariffs on MISCO's Chinese components have left the company at
a disadvantage against speakers that are entirely built in China and can be
imported with a 7.5% duty.
The anomaly has made it harder to fully pass along the increased tariff cost to
customers. MISCO spent $300,000 last year on the tariffs, but was forced to
absorb most of the increased cost.
Since the virus' outbreak in the United States in early March, many of MISCO's
customers such as Las Vegas-based gaming companies and aircraft makers have
asked to stop all deliveries until further notice. Some customers are asking for
longer payment terms, resulting in payment delays between 30 and 90 days. As a
result, Digre says MISCO's cash requirement has tripled.
So far, Digre has tried to avoid layoffs. Instead, the 40-hour work week has
been shortened to 32 hours, and capital spending as well as advertising have
been slashed.
A government-sponsored payroll protection loan has also helped. But if the
business does not rebound and there is no tariff relief, Digre says it will be
"very difficult" to operate beyond June.
Sayward is similarly unsure of Vivacity's future after its cash runs out in June
and the ability to obtain a government-sponsored small business loan remains
difficult.
"If things don't change and we don't get the money, we are looking at closing,"
Sayward said.
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and
Matthew Lewis)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |