The Trump administration is considering clamping down on Chinese
investments in the U.S. and imposing tariffs on a broad range of its
imports to punish Beijing for its alleged theft of intellectual
property, according to people familiar with the matter.
An
announcement following an investigation by the U.S. Trade
Representative’s office into China’s IP practices is expected in the
coming weeks, potentially handing President Donald Trump further cause
to impose trade restrictions.
His announcement last week of tariffs on
steel and aluminum imports has already ratcheted up global trade
tensions -- and led to the resignation Tuesday of his chief economic
adviser Gary Cohn, who opposes such measures.
Trump tweeted he’ll be making a decision on a replacement
soon and that there are “many people wanting the job.” The dollar fell
and the yen -- often a haven in turmoil -- jumped as much as 0.6 percent
to 105.46 per dollar, approaching a 16-month high set last week. Asian equities declined.
The
president is now fighting trade offensives on multiple fronts, from
targeting strategic rival China to angering allies like Canada and the
European Union with threats to erect fresh barriers. While his
counterparts have threatened retaliation, concrete action that would
herald the start of an all-out trade war has yet to come.
Liu He, President Xi Jinping’s top economic adviser who met with Cohn
in Washington last week, told delegates at the National People’s
Congress in Beijing that both sides had expressed a desire to avoid a
trade war, according to the Beijing Youth Daily.
Chinese officials -- who have been studying curbs on U.S. products such
as soybeans according to past reports -- were otherwise largely quiet
on the tariff question Wednesday.
Under the most severe scenario
being weighed, the U.S. could impose tariffs on a wide range of Chinese
imports, from shoes and clothing to consumer electronics, according to
two people familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity
because the discussions aren’t public.
The Trump administration could combine the tariffs with
restrictions on Chinese investments in the U.S., which are reviewed for
national-security risks by Treasury’s Committee on Foreign Investment in
the U.S., the people said. The new measures being considered by the
administration could go beyond even domestic security considerations.
With the probe into China, known as a Section 301 action, U.S.
officials are also considering a more targeted approach that would seek
to rein in Chinese investments, the people said.
The administration is
looking at ways to enforce reciprocity with China on foreign investment,
meaning the U.S. would only allow takeovers in sectors that U.S.
companies can access in China, according to the people.
Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin has urged closer vetting of foreign takeovers,
and Republican lawmakers are pushing legislation aimed at curbing China’s influence.

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