China matches US $50-billion tariff threat

The proposed measures follow a similar US list of $50-billion worth of Chinese imports that could be subject to tariffs. China’s list includes 106 items that could be slapped with additional 25-percent import fees.

China on Wednesday responded to the Trump administration’s planned tariffs on $50-billion worth of Chinese products with proposed tariff increases for goods including soybeans, planes, cars, frozen beef, cotton and chemicals.

China’s Commerce and Finance Ministries said Beijing’s list of 25 percent additional tariffs on US goods covered 106 items with a trade value matching the $50-billion figure.

The move by China the latest in ongoing tit-for-tat measures between the two countries.

The announcement came after the US published a list of $50-billion worth of Chinese imports that could have tariffs imposed on them.

The US is the second-biggest soybean supplier, after Brazil, to China, which is the world’s largest consumer of soybeans.

The US exports 62 percent of its soybeans and 25 percent of Boeing aircraft to China, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

The China director of the US Soybean Export Council said China’s proposed tariffs on soybeans from the US was “regrettable” and “won’t solve the trade imbalance.”

US list to go under review

The Chinese tax agency said the date the tariff increases might take effect would be announced later depending on what the US government decides regarding their own list of proposed tariffs.

The list of 1,300 products published by the US Trade Representative (USTR) is to undergo further review over the next 60 days before a final decision is made on which of them, if any, will be subject to the additional 25-per-cent tariffs.

The USTR list of tariffs includes chemicals, motorcycles, electric cars and electronic components, and would affect Chinese-manufactured flat-panel televisions and light-emitting diodes (LEDs).

The latest tariffs on Chinese products were a response to China’s intellectual property practices, the USTR said. Chinese policies had “coerced American companies into transferring their technology and intellectual property to domestic Chinese enterprises,” the trade body said.

Source: dw.com