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TRADE WARS
Touch wood: US trade war leaves China importers struggling
By Matthew KNIGHT
Shanghai (AFP) May 28, 2019

China says any US trade talks must be based on 'mutual respect'
Beijing (AFP) May 27, 2019 - China on Monday said any US trade talks must be based on "mutual respect" and equality after President Donald Trump said there was a good chance of clinching a deal.

"We always believe that any differences between any two countries should of course be resolved through friendly negotiations and consultations," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said at a regular press briefing.

Trump said Monday said there was a "very good" chance of clinching a trade deal with China as the world's top two economies clash over their trade relationship.

"I think sometime in the future, China and the US will have a great trade deal and we look forward to that," Trump said after talks with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo.

His remarks came just two weeks after trade tensions reignited when Trump more than doubled tariffs on US$ 200 billion worth of Chinese merchandise -- sparking retaliation from Beijing -- and threatened further levies that could affect nearly all of China's remaining exports to the US.

"We have seen different statements being made about the Sino-US economic and trade consultations by (different entities) including high-level people in the US," Lu said.

"Sometimes it is said that an agreement will be reached soon, and sometimes it is said it's difficult to reach an agreement," he said.

The spokesman said that China's position has "remained consistent".

"We have also always insisted on consultations between China and the United States, including economic and trade consultations, which must be based on mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit."

Xu Xuebing began importing US wood products into Shanghai two years ago, anticipating sizable profits re-selling to Chinese furniture manufacturers.

Then the China-US trade war started.

Since Beijing began to impose retaliatory tariffs on US goods last year, Xu has halted imports, his profits have plummeted, and he may soon need to raise his prices just to survive -- which could kill off sales for good.

Xu, who is 42 and owns Shanghai-based company Sam Wood, doesn't mince words over who's to blame.

"Trump is so bossy and irrational, it forces us to fight back," he said.

"Even though (China's tariffs) do harm to our economy, we strongly support Uncle Xi and China's tough stance in the trade negotiations," he added, using the government-encouraged term of endearment for President Xi Jinping.

The world's two largest economies have levied tit-for-tat tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars worth of each other's imports since President Donald Trump launched the trade battle last year, seeking to pressure Beijing to change trade policies he calls unfair.

But the impact on small- to medium-sized Chinese businesses caught in the crossfire typically gets little attention, partly because China's Communist government suppresses bad news.

Xu, who also exports clothing to Russia and meat to Mongolia, began in March 2017 to import black walnut wood from the US states of Wisconsin, Missouri and Iowa.

But after the tariff slugfest broke out last year, Xu's bottom line was ravaged by duties of 20 percent that China slapped on the rough-cut woods that he had originally imported.

So he switched to semi-finished woods, which had been hit by tariffs of only five-percent.

- No good options -

The trade turmoil has also driven China's currency down, making Xu's imports even more expensive. Overall, his import costs are up 20 percent so far this year.

"Our sales target for 2018 was 50 million yuan ($7.25 million), but we only brought in 13 million yuan," Xu said.

"The trade war has had a huge and direct impact on our business."

Pre-tariffs, Sam Wood would do five to six million yuan of monthly business volume. But it earned only around four million yuan combined for the first three months of 2019.

"We are taking prudent measures. Less orders, less profits," said Xu, who recently suspended imports.

He has so far refrained from passing the higher costs on to his own clients -- like Hanning Group, a company in neighbouring Jiangsu province near Shanghai that produces furniture from US, African and Southeast Asian wood.

If tariffs rise further, "it will put a lot of pressure on costs in the whole market", said Wu Bian, Hanning's chairman.

"We shouldn't let ourselves be controlled by feelings but should calmly think 'it's here, how do we deal with it?'"

"We have to confront it and take steps towards making ourselves stronger."

Xu says some of his fellow wood importers have gone bust, and he may soon need to hike his prices. His US suppliers are also complaining to him of the pain, and Xu predicts some will go out of business this year.

The disruption of trade flows is pushing many Chinese importers to seek other sources for their goods, but Xu has struggled to find suitable alternatives.

"There are no good solutions and we are awaiting new signals in the trade war," he said.

"For the sake of national justice and patriotism, we must confront the tough with toughness."


Related Links
Global Trade News


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US official acknowledges consumers will pay some tariff costs
Washington (AFP) May 22, 2019
US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Wednesday acknowledged that consumers may pay higher prices as a result of the steep tariffs imposed on Chinese goods. Mnuchin's remarks were at odds with the message hammered by President Donald Trump, who claims China pays for the tariffs, creating a windfall for the US government. "There may in some cases be an impact passed on to our consumers," Mnuchin said in testimony before the House Financial Services Committee. He also said he had spoken to ... read more

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