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Trump Administration Dashes Hopes of Tariff Cut

President Donald Trump, however, would likely consider some specific exemptions to aid small businesses hurt by the virus, Mnuchin said on CNBC and to reporters at the White House.

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer was “looking at additional exemptions for companies that are particularly hit and have issues with the virus,” Mnuchin said. “To the extent that there are company-specific issues, we will address that with the president and react accordingly.”

Anti-tariff forces both outside and inside the government see the virus crisis as their biggest opportunity for rolling back at least some import taxes since a U.S.-China “Phase 1” trade deal was reached in December.

Tariffs of up to 25% remain on some $370 billion worth of Chinese goods imported annually. U.S. importers were billed for $48.1 billion in duties on Chinese goods from the Trump administration’s “Section 301” tariffs over the past 20 months, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

“This is a tax that is fully within the authorities of the executive branch, so they can very quickly give American businesses and American consumers a tax cut by lifting the tariffs that are in place,” U.S. Representative Stephanie Murphy told Reuters on Thursday.

The Florida Democrat urged Lighthizer on Wednesday to declare a trade “detente” by removing tariffs on both Chinese and European goods to aid small and medium-sized businesses.

Lighthizer, who for three years has led the Trump administration’s efforts to impose tariffs on Chinese goods, “was not receptive to the idea” during a closed-door meeting with members of the House Ways and Means Committee, Murphy said.

USTR did not respond to a request for comment.

The agency on Thursday night granted exclusions for 19 medical products from China, including face masks, stethoscope covers and blood pressure cuffs, the second such action in the past week.

The U.S.-China Business Council is also pressing for tariff reductions by both China and the United States as a way to help the world’s two largest economies weather coronavirus pressures.

“Both economies are suffering from a common challenge,” said USCBC President Craig Allen. “Both sides should use this as an opportunity to rein in the self-inflicted damage that tariffs cause.”

But there are differing views on tariffs within the Trump administration, Allen said, with “no clear consensus on moving forward with a tariff reduction no matter how obvious it may be that it’s in both countries’ interest.”

ELECTION LOOMS

Trump has touted his tough stance on China trade as a key differentiator from Democratic challengers in the November presidential election. Keeping tariffs in place on Chinese goods allows him to say he is maintaining leverage over China for a Phase 2 trade deal.

But rapidly deteriorating financial markets and worries that COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, will grind worldwide economic activity to a halt may be changing some trade thinking inside the administration, said a person familiar with White House trade deliberations.

“It’s not likely to happen” because of the election argument, the person said. “But COVID has changed a lot of things and industry sees an opening here.”

Before the coronavirus significantly reduced its global forecasts, the International Monetary Fund had estimated that U.S. and Chinese tariffs still in place after a Phase 1 trade deal would reduce 2020 global economic output by about 0.5%, or around $450 billion.

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