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Maendeleo Vijijini
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New York, USA
The US-China trade war has escalated in recent days, with
both countries announcing new tariffs on each other's goods.
US President Donald Trump has said repeatedly that China
will pay these taxes, even though his economic advisor, Larry Kudlow, on Sunday
admitted that US firms pay the tariffs on any goods brought in from China.
So is Mr Trump wrong when he says the trade war is good for
the US, and generating billions of dollars for the US Treasury?
And who will lose most as the conflict escalates?
Who really pays the US
tariffs?
US importers, not Chinese firms, pay the tariffs in the form
of taxes to the US government, confirms Christophe Bondy, a lawyer at Cooley
LLP.
Mr Bondy, who was senior counsel to the Canadian government
during the Canada-EU free trade agreement negotiations, says it is likely that
these additional costs are then simply passed on to US consumers in the form of
higher prices.
"They [the tariffs] have a strongly disruptive effect
on supply chains," he said.
What has the impact
been on China?
China remains America's top trading partner, with exports
rising 7% last year. However, trade flows to the US slipped 9% in the first
quarter of 2019, suggesting the trade war is starting to bite.
Despite this, Dr Meredith Crowley, a trade expert at the
University of Cambridge, says there is no evidence that Chinese firms have cut
their prices in a bid to keep US firms buying.
"Some exporters of highly substitutable goods have just
dropped out of the market as US firms have started importing from elsewhere.
Their margins are too thin and tariffs are clearly hurting them.
"I suspect those selling highly differentiated goods
have not reduced their prices, possibly because US importers rely on them too
much."
What has the impact on
the US been?
According to two academic studies published in March,
American businesses and consumers paid almost the entire cost of US trade
tariffs imposed on imports from China and elsewhere last year.
Economists from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York,
Princeton University and Columbia University calculated that duties imposed on
a wide range of imports, from steel to washing machines, cost US firms and
consumers $3bn (£2.3bn) a month in additional tax costs.
It also identified a further $1.4bn in losses linked to
depressed demand.
The second paper, penned by among others, Pinelopi Goldberg,
the World Bank's chief economist, also found that consumers and US companies
were paying most of the costs of the tariffs.
According to its analysis, after taking into account the
retaliation by other countries, the biggest victims of Trump's trade wars were
farmers and blue-collar workers in areas that supported Trump in the 2016
election.
Can't US firms just
buy their goods from other countries?
Mr Trump has said US firms that import from China should
look elsewhere - perhaps to Vietnam - or better still buy their goods from
American manufacturers.
But Mr Bondy says it is not so simple.
"It takes a long time for productivity and value chains
to be reoriented and that all comes at a cost.
"Take the steel tariffs the US imposed last year - it
is not like all of a sudden there are hundreds of new factories being built in
the US."
China is also a manufacturing powerhouse, dwarfing its
nearest rivals, which makes it hard to replace it in global supply chains.
Have trade tariffs
ever worked?
There is little evidence to suggest they have, say both Dr
Crowley and Mr Bondy.
In 2009, President Obama placed a steep tariff of 35% on
Chinese tyres, citing a surge in imports that was costing US jobs.
However, research from the Peterson Institute for
International Economics in 2012 found the cost to American consumers from
higher tyre prices was around $1.1bn in 2011.
Although about 1,200 manufacturing jobs were saved, it said,
the additional money US consumers spent reduced their spending on other retail
goods, "indirectly lowering employment in the retail industry".
"Adding further to the loss column, China retaliated by
imposing antidumping duties on US exports of chicken parts, costing that
industry around $1bn in sales," it said.
The one example usually given to defend tariffs is US
President Ronald Reagan's decision to impose steep duties on Japanese
motorcycles in 1983.
The move is credited as saving struggling US bike-maker
Harley Davidson from a surge of foreign competition.
But some have argued it was the company's own efforts -
including modernising its factories and building better engines - that really
drove its turnaround.
Will the US tariffs
force China to strike a deal?
Dr Crowley says the duties may draw China back to the
negotiating table, but she does not expect them to offer radical compromises.
"Yes they are having more of a growth slowdown, and
they export more to the US than vice versa, so they will suffer more from a
trade war.
"But they are not really interested in changing their
laws, and even if they did, do they really have the legal culture to enforce
it?"
Mr Bondy thinks Mr Trump's tariffs threats are more about
whipping up his voter base and making headlines.
"Tariffs are easier to understand than the painstaking
work of negotiating common sets of rules on things like the behaviour of
state-owned entities, protection of intellectual property, fair access to
markets and baseline protections for workers and the environment."
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