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Thursday, March 28, 2024

US not yet ready to lift tariffs on China: trade rep Tai

US Trade Representative Katherine Tai, whose appointment was confirmed earlier this month, told The Wall Street Journal she understood the levies were hitting some American companies and consumers, but they can also protect businesses.

President Joe Biden’s new trade negotiator has said the United States is not yet ready to lift tariffs on Chinese imports but could be open to talks with Beijing.

US Trade Representative Katherine Tai, whose appointment was confirmed earlier this month, told The Wall Street Journal she understood the levies were hitting some American companies and consumers, but they can also protect businesses.

In January 2020, then-president Donald Trump signed an accord between Beijing and Washington after a bruising trade battle that saw tariffs imposed by both sides.

The two nations reached a “Phase One” deal in January 2020, but progress on the negotiation front deteriorated by the middle of the year, with Trump saying in July that relations between the two countries had been “severely damaged” by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Read more: US charges tire company with evading tariffs on China

“I have heard people say, ‘Please just take these tariffs off,'” the 47-year-old Tai told the WSJ in an interview published Sunday.

But the former trade lawyer — whose parents were born in China — warned that suddenly axing the levies could harm the US economy unless a policy reversal is “communicated in a way so that the actors in the economy can make adjustments.”

She said it was essential for “companies, traders, manufacturers or their workers” to be able to plan for the future.

Tai told the Journal that while she recognized the tariffs were taking a toll on some US businesses, they had been imposed “to remedy an unbalanced and unfair trade situation.”

She also cited tactical reasons for holding firm.

“No negotiator walks away from leverage, right?” she said.

“Every good negotiator is going to keep all of their options open.”

Read more: US-China ‘Cold War’: how bad can it get?

Tai has already discussed Beijing’s trade practices in calls with Japanese ministers, and in her confirmation hearings said she supported a “holistic review on China.”

AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk