China plans 25% tariffs on US goods including cars

Beijing is to place 25% trade tariffs on a list of 106 US goods, including soybeans, cars, and orange juice.

The retaliatory action comes after the US published a list of about 1,300 Chinese products it plans to hit with a 25% tariff.

The White House said the proposed imports tariff was a response to unfair Chinese practices to do with intellectual property rights.

The US tax targets items like medical products, televisions and motorcycles.

In response, the Chinese finance ministry said it would put 25% tariffs on US chemicals, some types of aircraft and corn products.

The products targeted by the tariffs were worth $50bn (£35.5bn) in 2017, according to a separate statement from the Chinese commerce ministry.

Extra tariffs will also be placed on products such as whiskey, cigars and tobacco, some types of beef, lubricants, and propane and other plastic products, the finance ministry said.

US orange juice, certain sorghum products, cotton, some types of wheat, as well as trucks, some SUVs and certain electric vehicles, will also be subject to the new duties, the ministry added.

‘In nobody’s interest’

Beijing said it “strongly condemns and firmly opposes” the tariffs.

“Such unilateralistic and protectionist action has gravely violated fundamental principles and values of the WTO [World Trade Organisation],” the Chinese embassy in Washington said in a statement on Wednesday.

China said the US action did not serve either country’s interests and “even less the interest of the global economy”.

“As the Chinese saying goes, it is only polite to reciprocate,” the statement added.

“The Chinese side will resort to the WTO dispute settlement mechanism and take corresponding measures of equal scale and strength against US products in accordance with Chinese law.”

Trade war fears

Economists had previously warned the Trump administration’s move to slap China with the tariffs could prompt Beijing to retaliate and lead to higher prices for American consumers.

The release of the list comes just after China hit $3bn worth of US products with tariffs in response to steel and aluminium tariffs the US has imposed.

The products on the list the US published on Tuesday represent imports worth about $50bn annually.

  • 18.2% of all China’s exports go to the United States

  • $129bn worth of China-made electrical machinery bought by US

  • 59.2% growth in Chinese services imported by US between 2006 & 2016

  • $347bn US goods trade deficit with China

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The office of the US Trade Representative, which handles trade negotiations, said the amount was “appropriate both in light of the estimated harm to the US economy and to obtain elimination of China’s harmful acts, policies and practices”.

A final list will be determined after a public comment period and review, expected to last about two months.

The plans for tariffs are the result of an investigation that US President Donald Trump ordered last year into China’s intellectual property practices.

Last month, he said the probe found evidence of problems, such as practices that pressure US companies to share technology with Chinese firms and ordered a list of products drawn up for tariffs.

Hopes for a resolution

When announcing its intentions to retaliate against the US tariffs on Wednesday, the Chinese embassy in Washington said it hoped the US would “with sense and long-term picture in mind, refrain from going down the wrong path”.

US business groups have also urged the two sides to try to resolve the issues through talks, expressing concern that threatening tariffs could lead to a dispute that hurts the US economy.

The US Chamber of Commerce said: “The administration is rightly focused on restoring equity and fairness in our trade relationship with China. However, imposing taxes on products used daily by American consumers and job creators is not the way to achieve those ends.”

China’s economy has become less dependent on exports in recent years, which is likely to blunt the effect of the tariffs, according to analysts for S&P Global Ratings.

The US was the destination for about 18.2% of Chinese goods in 2016 according to the US trade department.

The list includes parts of communication satellites, semiconductors, aviation equipment and brewery machinery, as well as more niche products such as bakery ovens and rocket launchers.

Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM US, said he did not think the Chinese would take the list seriously, pointing to low-demand items like monitors with video cassette recorders.

Instead, he said the main outcome was likely to be higher prices for American manufacturers – and, eventually, consumers.

That may not be enough to persuade the Trump administration to opt for a different strategy, he added.

“At this point, if the Trump administration does not follow through on this they’re going to lose face and credibility,” he said.