Beijing sounds warning on Trump tariffs: ‘trade war will hurt everyone’
08 Mar 2018
China warned the United States today that everyone will be harmed if President Donald Trump launches a trade war, even as official figures showed the Asian power maintained a robust trade surplus with the US.
China will respond as necessary in the event of a trade war with the United States, foreign Minister Wang Yi said.
US President Donald Trump is expected to establish tariffs of 25 per cent on imported steel and 10 per cent on imported aluminium today despite global concerns. But the White House
has said there could be a 30-day exemption for Mexico and Canada and some other countries based on national security. Such a move aims to counter cheap imports, especially from China, that Trump says undermine US industry and jobs.
"Choosing a trade war is surely the wrong prescription, in the end you will only hurt others and yourself. China will certainly make an appropriate and necessary response," Wang said at a press conference on the sidelines of the Communist Party's annual parliamentary session.
Trump's administration has faced growing opposition to the tariffs from prominent congressional Republicans and business officials worried about their potential impact on the economy.
Wang said China and the United States did not have to be rivals, and history showed that trade wars were not the correct way to resolve problems.
''Especially given today's globalisation, choosing a trade war is a mistaken prescription. The outcome will only be harmful,'' Wang said. ''China would have to make a justified and necessary response.''
On Wednesday, at the World Trade Organization, China led a group of 18 members urging Trump to scrap the planned tariffs, with its representative saying the levies would pose a systemic threat to the rules-based global trading system.
US imports from China of steel and aluminium make up a small proportion of its total imports from the world's second largest economy. But the tariffs may be the first foray in the brewing American trade war with Beijing.
Wang said China had a long way to go on its path of modernisation, and that it ''will not and need not displace the United States''.
Trump addressed trade with China in tweets on Wednesday, demanding that it lay out plans for reducing its trade surplus with the United States by $1 billion, which appeared to have been raised during a meeting with a top Chinese official last week.
''China has been asked to develop a plan for the year of a One Billion Dollar reduction in their massive Trade Deficit with the United States,'' Trump tweeted, without saying where the message had been conveyed.
Trump appeared to have bungled in the tweet, as he does all too often. He mistakenly referred to a deficit where China runs a surplus. It was also not clear if he meant that amount,
which would only be about 0.27 per cent of the record $375.2 billion goods trade surplus China had with the United States last year.
In coming weeks, the Trump administration plans to issue a report on China's intellectual property practices expected to hammer China and possibly bring about further tariffs on a wider range of Chinese imports.
"The US is acting swiftly on Intellectual Property theft. We cannot allow this to happen as it has for many years!" Trump tweeted hours before Wang took the stage in Beijing.
Trade tensions between the world's two largest economies have risen since Trump took office in 2017, and although China only accounts for a small fraction of US steel imports, its massive industry expansion has helped produce a global glut of steel that has driven down prices.
The US tariffs are expected to go into effect in two months, though economists see little immediate impact on China.
Capital Economics estimates China's exports of steel and aluminium to the United States account for less than 0.1 per cent of its gross domestic product, as both are already limited by anti-dumping measures.
''On paper, China has more to lose from a trade war – it exports far more to the US than it imports. But there are few alternative sources for the main products the US buys from China,'' the research firm said in a note on Wednesday.
US soy beans, aircraft and cars are widely seen as vulnerable to possible retaliation from Beijing.
Trump is also considering trade sanctions against China under a ''Section 301'' investigation into its intellectual property practices and pressure on foreign companies for technology transfers.
According to Reuters, diplomatic and US business sources say the United States has all but frozen a formal mechanism for talks on commercial disputes with China because it is not satisfied it has met its promises to ease market restrictions.
China's latest trade data released on Thursday showed its February exports up 44.5 per cent from a year earlier, beating market expectations, while imports grew 6.3 per cent. That left it with a trade surplus of $33.74 billion for the month, and a January-February trade surplus with the United States of $42.92 billion.
China's trade performance rebounded in 2017 and logged a strong start this year thanks to robust demand at home and abroad.
But the tensions with the United States are clouding the outlook for exports, while a cooling property market may curb domestic demand for imported raw materials such as iron ore.