Air Freight News

U.S. Delays Some Tariff Payments, Leaves China Levies in Place

The U.S. will allow companies to defer paying tariffs on many imported goods for 90 days, a move aimed at freeing up cash for pandemic-hit employers while leaving punitive measures against China and other nations intact.

“This will protect American jobs and help these businesses get through this time,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement.

The deferral doesn’t apply to anti-dumping or countervailing duties, or so-called Section 201, 232 or 301 tariffs. So it won’t ease President Donald Trump’s punitive import taxes on Chinese goods, on steel and aluminum, or those tied to enforcement actions he took including against Airbus SE.

To qualify for the deferment, U.S. importers have to demonstrate “significant financial hardship,” according to a separate statement from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

For several weeks, White House officials have debated tariff relief to help companies that are laying off millions of workers and clamoring for emergency federal loans to cushion the a sharp, steep economic downturn that may rival the Great Depression.

While the tariff-payment deferral might ease some short-term strain, the bigger issue now is whether it will help counter a slump in domestic consumption.

“The postponement has little effect in stabilizing the U.S. economy,” Gai Xinzhe, a senior analyst at Sino-Ocean Capital in Beijing. “The problem is with the demand side, and this postponement can hardly solve that.”

The move comes amid heightened rhetoric between the world’s two largest economies as the Trump administration blames the global spread of Covid-19 on China’s perceived lack of transparency about the initial outbreak in the city of Wuhan. Deaths in the U.S. attributed to the disease have topped 41,000.

“If it was a mistake, a mistake is a mistake,” Trump said during news conference over the weekend. “But if they were knowingly responsible, yeah, then there should be consequences.”

A top Wuhan laboratory official denied any role in spreading the new virus.

In January, the countries signed phase one of a trade deal in which China agreed to buy more American imports, including energy and agriculture commodities, in exchange for a cease fire on tariff increases. According to Bloomberg Economics, China wasn’t hitting purchase targets at the three-month mark.

As China’s economy slowly reopens, that may be about to change. A tanker carrying liquefied natural gas, which departed from the U.S. around March 21, docked at a Chinese port on Sunday, according to vessel-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg on Monday. That’s China’s first import of U.S. LNG in a year, and six more ships are en route.

Bloomberg
Bloomberg

{afn_job_title}

© Bloomberg
The author’s opinion are not necessarily the opinions of the American Journal of Transportation (AJOT).

Similar Stories

https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/methamphetamine.jpg
CBP intercepts over $30 million in methamphetamine at the Pharr International Bridge
View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/DREW_%28new%29.JPG
WTCA Forum 2024 in New York underscores importance of international collaboration
View Article
ACD celebrates 2024 Annual Meeting in La Quinta, California

Today, the Alliance for Chemical Distribution (ACD) welcomed 666 members and industry leaders for its highly anticipated 2024 Annual Meeting held in La Quinta, California.

View Article
Holiday spending still on track for steady growth amid ‘mixed signals’ in recent jobs and GDP data

The National Retail Federation still expects steady sales growth for the winter holiday season despite contradictions in the latest economic indicators, NRF Chief Economist Jack Kleinhenz said today.

View Article
Trump Presidency will reignite US-China trade war and threaten a spike in ocean container shipping markets / Xeneta

Donald Trump’s victory in the US Presidential Election is ‘a step in the wrong direction’ for international trade as importers fear another spike in ocean container shipping freight rates.

View Article
https://www.ajot.com/images/uploads/article/Census_Bureau.png
U.S. international trade in goods and services, September 2024
View Article