China plans to hit US soybeans, planes as trade war looms

China plans to hit US soybeans, planes as trade war looms

AFP/File / STRThe US says it could impose tariffs on a range of Chinese imports, including electronics
China Wednesday unveiled plans to hit major US exports such as soybeans, cars and small aircraft with retaliatory tariffs worth $50 billion in an escalating trade duel between the world's two top economies.
The move came hours after President Donald Trump's administration published its own $50 billion list of Chinese products facing US tariffs because of Beijing's alleged theft of intellectual property and technology.
The two powers have engaged in heated rhetoric and tit-for-tat actions that have raised the prospect of a trade war and rattled global markets.
Markets in Japan and Australia clung on to marginal gains wednesday but China, Hong Kong and South Korea dipped into the red ahead of Beijing's announcement.
Trump took to Twitter following Beijing's action, blaming previous US administrations for the US trade deficit and intellectual property "theft" by China.
"We are not in a trade war with China, that war was lost many years ago by the foolish, or incompetent, people who represented the US," Trump tweeted. "We cannot let this continue!"
Foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said China remains open to talks, "but the opportunity for consultation and negotiation has been missed by the US side time and again".
"The US side should not try to threaten China in a condescending way. We should have give and take, instead of threatening the others senselessly," Geng told reporters before Beijing announced the tariff plan.
"Any attempt to bring China to its knees through threats and intimidation will never succeed. It will not succeed this time either."
The Chinese commerce ministry unveiled a list of 106 products, including chemical goods, frozen beef and whiskey, that will be hit by duties of 25 percent, though it did not announce a date for their implementation.
A third of all US soybean exports go to China in sales worth $14 billion last year, and the crop is grown in rural states that voted for Trump in the 2016 election.
The tariffs also target planes that weigh no more than 45,000 kg -- smaller than the major commercial jets made by Boeing.
The targeted planes would include private jets like the Gulfstream V and others that have been snapped up by China's elite.
AFP / WANG ZHAOChina this week hit back at earlier tariffs, imposing its own levies on US wine, nuts and fruit
Taken together the $100 billion worth of targeted goods represents a good portion of the $580 billion in two-way trade recorded last year.
When asked about Trump's demand for China to lower its trade surplus with the US by $100 billion, vice commerce minister Wang Shouwen told reporters China "can't accept this, foremost because it's impossible to do".
Beijing also launched a dispute settlement procedure at the World Trade Organization on Wednesday, the commerce ministry said in a separate statement, adding that Washington had committed a "flagrant violation of WTO rules".
China's newly unveiled tariffs come after Beijing imposed duties on about $3 billion on US exports such as pork, wine and fruit on Monday in response to earlier US tariffs on steel and aluminium.
The US followed on Tuesday with its $50 billion list, which includes imports like electronics, aircraft parts, satellites, medicine, machinery and other goods.
The proposed list targets "products that benefit from China's industrial plans while minimising the impact on the US economy", the office of US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said in a statement.
It identifies roughly 1,300 goods that could face duties of 25 percent but remains subject to a review process that will last until at least May before it can take effect.
- Mixed feelings -
Over the last month, Trump has shaken markets and disregarded warnings from industry groups and members of his own Republican party in announcing punishing new tariffs on exports from major trading partners.
The move toward trade sanctions on China, however, had received a mixed response, with some support among lawmakers and industry bodies.
The US-China Business Council said it agreed that US companies suffer forced technology transfer in China -- but warned against tariffs.
"The American business community wants to see solutions to these problems, not just sanctions," John Frisbie, the council's president, said in a statement.
AFP/File / ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDSUS President Donald Trump has repeatedly railed against Chinese imports, insisting the US gets a bad deal from its trade relationship with the world's number two economy
"China needs to substantially improve market access and competitive conditions for American companies selling to and investing in China in certain sectors, but unilateral tariffs may do more harm than good."
General trade tensions had calmed in recent days, with investors taking some solace from news that Washington had begun talks to resolve differences with the European Union and China.
But in a series of irate tweets this week, Trump renewed threats to scrap the North American Free Trade Agreement -- another trade bugbear which he has denounced as a killer of US jobs.

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