US-China trade war hits USD 100 billion in goods

From Harley Davidson motorcycles and American bourbon to machinery and computer processors, the world's two largest economies have exchanged punitive tariffs that slice through a wide swath of key products.
August 23, 2018 | 11:00

From Harley Davidson motorcycles and American bourbon to machinery and computer processors, the world's two largest economies have exchanged punitive tariffs that slice through a wide swath of key products.

Starting Thursday (Aug 23) at 0401 GMT (11.01pm Hanoi time), the U.S. will charge 25 per cent import duties on an additional USD 16 billion in Chinese products, bringing the total to over 1,000 items valued at about USD 50 billion in trade a year.

China has responded dollar-for-dollar on hundreds of U.S. goods, putting the total value of affected goods at USD 100 billion, one-seventh of the total annual U.S.-China trade.

US-China trade war hits USD 100 billion in goods

Starting Aug 23, 2018, the U.S. will charge 25 per cent import duties on an additional USD 16 billion in Chinese products. (Photo: AFP/Gal Roma)

TOP CHINESE IMPORTS TARGETED

The Trump administration says the aggressive stance is meant to pressure Beijing to change policies that allow and encourage the theft of U.S. technology and unfairly undercut American producers.

The tariffs are aimed at Chinese goods - such as aircraft parts and computer hard drives - that Washington says have benefited from unfair trade practices.

China has accused the United States of starting the "largest trade war in economic history."

Computers and electronics, and machinery are among the hardest hit, including USD 1.1 billion in imports of computer processors, and the same amount of electrical machines.

The next biggest victim is USD 700 million in integrated circuits, USD 500 million in solar cells, and USD 400 million in computer memory.

MOTORCYCLES, MILKING MACHINES

Also on the hit list, milking machines for dairy cows, incubators for baby chicks, flight data recorders, x-ray tubes, bulldozers and arc lamps as well as motorcycles and mopeds.

GHOST PRODUCTS

While the top five products from China targeted total about USD 9 billion, there are dozens of products that have seen no imports - or very small amounts - in the past two years.

Spacecraft, helicopters, microwave tubes, nuclear reactor parts, telescopes, locomotives and retread tires are among the goods subject to tariffs but unlikely to be hit by them in practice.

US-China trade war hits USD 100 billion in goods

Harley Davidson, the iconic American hog maker, will bump up the price of its bikes at least 20 per cent, says a store representative in Beijing. (Photo: AFP/Drew Angerer)

U.S. FEELS THE PAIN

Ironically, the goods the United States has targeted for retaliation are mostly intermediate products manufactured in China by multinational companies imported by U.S.-based manufacturers, and miss Chinese firms, according to analysis by economists.

Economists with the Peterson Institute for International Economics say nearly all of the US tariffs imposed on China to date are on intermediate goods and capital equipment needed by US industry.

CHINA HITS BACK

China so far has retaliated dollar-for-dollar, hitting agricultural goods and autos in July, with new taxes on U.S. oil and more vehicles to come Thursday.

The most painful perhaps is the tariff on U.S. soybeans since that chokes off a key export market for American farmers, who shipped USD 14 billion of the beans to China last year.

US-China trade war hits USD 100 billion in goods

The most painful retaliatory tariff is perhaps the one on U.S. soybeans since that chokes off a key export market for American farmers. (Photo: AFP/Scott Olson)

China has pledged to strike back at 650 different U.S. exports including hybrid electric and off road vehicles, dump trucks, asphalt, MRI machines and motorcycles, among other items on Thursday.

The list also includes beef, pork, many types of fish, and dozens of fruits and nuts.

Harley Davidson, the iconic American hog maker, will bump up the price of its bikes at least 20 per cent, a store representative in Beijing said.

MORE COMING

The USD 50 billion in goods now subject to tariffs is only the first round. The office of the U.S. Trade Representative is looking into 25 per cent duties on another USD 200 billion in goods, with hearings underway this week. Those could take effect as soon as next month.

And as China has vowed to retaliate further, Trump has threatened to target all USD 500 billion in goods the U.S. imports./.

VNF/AFP

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