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Le Monde
Le Monde
14 May 2024


Images Le Monde.fr

The United States is hiking tariffs on $18 billion worth of imports from China, targeting strategic sectors like electric vehicles, batteries, steel and critical minerals, the White House said on Tuesday, May 14. The decision comes as President Joe Biden gears up for a re-run of his 2020 contest with Republican rival Donald Trump in November's election, with officials criticizing Trump's record on trade as they made the announcement.

The tariff rate on EVs is set to quadruple to 100% this year while the one for semiconductors will surge from 25% to 50% by next year, said the White House. The action is aimed at encouraging China to "eliminate its unfair trade practices regarding technology transfer, intellectual property, and innovation," it added in a statement.

This follows a review of tariffs imposed during a trade war between Washington and Beijing, during which then president Trump introduced levies on some $300 billion in goods from China. The so-called Section 301 investigation was the primary tool the Trump administration used to justify tariffs, and the US Trade Representative is required to look into the impact of the levies after four years. Tuesday's actions were also taken under Section 301 of the Trade Act.

Beyond EVs and semiconductors, Washington is roughly tripling tariffs on some steel and aluminum products, and on lithium-ion EV batteries and battery parts. The tariff rate on natural graphite and some other critical minerals will surge from 0% to 25%, and that on solar cells doubles as well from 25% to 50%.

Beijing's foreign ministry said it "opposes unilateral tariff hikes in violation of WTO rules" when asked about reports of the new measures. China "will take all necessary measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests", spokesperson Wang Wenbin said on Tuesday.

The latest moves impact both products already targeted by Trump tariffs, alongside additional ones. The levies will ensure that investments in jobs, spurred by Biden's policies, are not undercut by "underpriced exports from China," National Economic Advisor Lael Brainard said.

The Biden administration has pumped massive funding into areas like semiconductor manufacturing and research, alongside efforts to boost green investments. But Brainard accused Beijing of powering its growth "at the expense of others." "As a result of unfair practices, China's anticipated manufacturing capacity in solar is more than double the forecasts of near term global demand," she said.

Brainard also took aim at the Trump administration, saying it "failed to follow through" with investments, and to ensure China complied with a deal marking a truce in the trade war. The so-called Phase One agreement "did not deliver on its promises to increase exports to China from the US, to create manufacturing jobs here in America, or to end China's unfair practices," she said.

Beijing is likelier to retaliate strongly if Washington takes measures seen as suppressing Chinese companies, like imposing more trade restrictions on semiconductor firms.

Le Monde with AFP