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US sticks new set of tariffs on Chinese goods

A new wave of tariffs by the Trump administration went into effect Sunday, rendering the majority of goods imported to the United States from China subject to import taxes.

It is the latest move in a drawn-out conflict between the world’s two largest economies. This round — a 15% tariff on billions of dollars’ worth of Chinese goods as varied as cereal bowls, paintbrushes and pajamas — is likely to hit US households in the most direct way yet.

By how much? About $460 over a year for the average family, according to an analysis from economists Kirill Borusyak at University College London and Xavier Jaravel at the London School of Economics.

Across the income spectrum, the tariffs may cost up to $970 for the US’ wealthiest households and as low as $340 for its poorest. These estimates includes tariffs enacted so far as well as proposed increases for later this year.

After the Trump administration first enacted tariffs on imported solar panels and washing machines in early 2018, it began directly imposing levies on Chinese products. China responded with its own tariffs, and the two sides have since retaliated with higher rates and targeted more products.

Until this month, the United States had in place a 25% tariff on $250 billion worth of Chinese products. In addition to the round on Sunday, further increases and tariffs are expected in October and December, in the end amounting to levies on nearly everything that comes to the United States from China.

But the administration’s trade policy hasn’t been limited to China. And with tariffs that touch Mexican, Canadian, European and other imports, the cost for the typical US household so far is estimated at $250.

That number may double if all of the proposed tariffs go into effect this fall. This is a far cry from the average annual cost of $60 when the researchers did a similar analysis over a year ago.

These figures should be considered rough estimates, because a number of factors complicate determining what the true costs may be. Other estimates, which did not include the upcoming tariffs, ranged from $400 to $1,000 per household annually.

The costs of a tariff can be felt at various points along a product’s supply chain. While there is some new evidence that tariffs are passed on directly to importers at the border, it’s still unclear how much of those costs are absorbed by retailers. An item on a store shelf is the product of many costs, including labor, rent, shipping and marketing.

Borusyak and Jaravel point out that as tariffs rise, the bite might even hurt less. That’s because higher levies may prod companies to produce goods in other countries that may not be subject to the same import rates as China.

Then there’s the matter of what people actually buy. Many families may also not purchase some products frequently enough to uniformly feel the effect of the tariffs.

Over the next few months, the cost of the trade war will increase more sharply for so-called nondurable goods, products that people buy frequently like food, clothes and cosmetics than durable goods, products that people tend to buy infrequently like cars, electronics and appliances.

Borusyak said this is where the trade war’s bite might become much more noticeable. Not only do the tariffs on these products cost disproportionately more for poor families, but these are things that families must buy routinely and cannot really put off, so upticks in prices may be much more noticeable than in electronics. And these are increases that are already being felt.

Prices of small items like pet food and canned fruits over the last two years have grown by 1 to 2 percentage points more than the general rate of inflation.

But prices for some things that people don’t buy routinely have shot up since the Trump administration began enacting tariffs.

But even if families end up spending a hundred dollars more on, say, a washing machine or several hundred dollars more over the course of the year on other spending, it may ultimately not be enough for them to notice — or, at least, attribute to the trade war.

“Some toy you see in Walmart may go from $20 to $25,” said David Weinstein, an economist at Columbia University. “Any one of these purchases won’t break the bank.”

(BDN24)

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