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Trump to impose tariffs on $50b in Chinese imports — White House
By AFP - Mar 22,2018 - Last updated at Mar 22,2018
In this photo taken on March 10, a worker stands in a steel workshop in Zouping, in China’s eastern Shandong province (AFP file photo)
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump will impose tariffs on about $50 billion in Chinese goods imports to retaliate against the alleged theft of American intellectual property, White House officials said on Thursday.
The new import duties will target industrial sectors where “China has sought to acquire an advantage through the unfair acquisition or forced technology transfer from US companies,” Senior White House Economic adviser Everett Eissenstat told reporters.
Trump was due to unveil the sanctions later Thursday.
The products subject to the new tariffs have not yet been officially identified and Thursday’s announcement did not immediately impose new import duties.
But the move sent stocks diving on Wall Street, where the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down about two per cent ahead of the announcement, and ratcheted up Trump’s campaign of confrontation with trading partners.
In a memorandum that was due to be signed on Thursday, Trump would direct US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer to publish a proposed list of products that could be subject to tariffs.
He would also direct Lighthizer to take action against China at the World Trade Organisation, charging Beijing with preventing US companies from licensing their technology in China.
The measure also directs the US Treasury to develop new proposals to increase safeguards against investments that could compromise US national security.
White House officials on Thursday indicated that the actions capped years of efforts to encourage China to end the alleged unfair practices and respect market-oriented practices.
“Those dialogues failed under the Bush and Obama administrations,” White House Trade Adviser Peter Navarro told reporters.
“The problem is that with the Chinese in this case talk is not cheap, it’s been very, very expensive and finally the president decided we needed to move forward.”
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