US slaps anti-dumping duties on Chinese alloy aluminum sheet by Staff Writers Washington (AFP) June 19, 2018 The United States on Tuesday said it was imposing steep import duties on Chinese imports of alloy aluminum sheet valued at nearly $1 billion which Washington says have been dumped on the US market. Trade relations between the world's two top economies on Tuesday were at the brink of all-out conflict, with US President Donald Trump having threatened late Monday to place tariffs on almost all of Chinese exports to the United States. Tuesday's announcement was part of a process begun in November that marked the first time in 33 years that the US Commerce Department had self-initiated the process of imposing anti-dumping import duties by itself -- not at the behest of US manufacturers. "The Department of Commerce will do everything in its power to stop the flow of unfairly subsidized or dumped goods into US markets," US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement. The department said Tuesday it had reached a preliminary conclusion that Chinese exporters had sold the aluminum sheet in the US at 167.2 percent below fair value. As a result, US Customs and Border Protection will begin collecting cash deposits from importers based on the alleged dumping rates. A similar Commerce Department process found in February that the imports were subject to impermissible Chinese subsidies. US imports of Chinese-made common alloy aluminum sheet in 2017 were valued at about $900 million, according to the Commerce Department, up about 50 percent from 2016. A final determination is due in late 2018 and could be blocked by the independent US International Trade Commission, which has disagreed with several of the Trump administration's dumping- and subsidy-related tariff decisions. China is also subject to 10 percent US duties on primary aluminum imports announced in March but the United States imports only a marginal amount of that substance from China every year.
China accuses Trump of 'blackmail' after new tariffs threat Beijing (AFP) June 19, 2018 Beijing on Tuesday accused Donald Trump of "blackmail" and warned it would retaliate in kind after the US president threatened to impose fresh tariffs on Chinese goods, pushing the world's two biggest economies closer to a trade war. Trump said on Monday he had asked the US Trade Representative to target $200 billion worth of imports for a 10 percent levy, citing China's "unacceptable" move to raise its own tariffs. He added he would identify an extra $200 billion of goods - for a possible tota ... read more
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