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Trump Administration Levying $200 Billion In China Tariffs

But removes consumer-connected devices from list

The Telecommunications Industry Association said that the Trump administration’s finalized list of products subject to a new tariff will result in hundreds of millions of dollars worth of damage to the telecom equipment industry.

The good news is that consumer-connected devices–phones, tablets, etc.–were removed from the final list, said the Consumer Technology Association, but that left routers and circuit assemblies and networking equipment that tech groups say could slow the rollout of 5G and closing the digital divide.

See also: CTA: New Tariffs Would Do Billion-Dollar Number On U.S. Economy

President Trump said Monday (Sept. 17) that “following seven weeks of public notice, hearings, and extensive opportunities for comment, I directed the United States Trade Representative (USTR) to proceed with placing additional tariffs on roughly $200 billion of imports from China.” He said they were a response to “unfair policies and practices relating to United States technology and intellectual property – such as forcing United States companies to transfer technology to Chinese counterparts.”

The new tariffs take effect Sept. 24.

“The tariffs imposed by the administration will undermine the American adoption of strategic technologies including 5G, exacting long-term economic costs and hurting U.S. strategic competitiveness,” said TIA SVP Cinnamon Rogers. “The finalized tariffs target equipment essential for next-generation telecom technology that will enable network-based innovations like Artificial Intelligence, cloud computing, and the Internet of Things. Taxing the network equipment used to deliver these services and devices will handicap America amid a global race for technology leadership. … Tariffs will also hurt consumers by making it more expensive to deploy broadband, thereby impeding efforts to narrow the digital divide and exacerbating inequities in internet access.”

The Consumer Technology Association agreed, calling the tariffs bad policy as well as legally questionable, though praising the removal of consumer devices from the list, which it had strongly opposed.

See also: ‘Tariffs Are Taxes, Plain And Simple’

“We appreciate the Trump administration removing consumer connected devices, the largest tariff code CTA identified in our USTR (United States Trade Representative) comments,” said CTA president Gary Shapiro. But he added: “Retaliatory tariffs, whether 10 percent or 25 percent, are bad policy. We are especially concerned about retaliatory tariffs on printed circuit assemblies, routers and networking equipment. They will stifle our global leadership in 5G, create an internet tax on businesses and cause uncertainty for companies.”

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