-
US Government Employees Encouraged to Report Trump Admin’s ‘Abuse of Power’ - 5 mins ago
-
Trump has paralyzed agency that safeguards worker rights, labor experts and advocates say - 15 mins ago
-
Ecuador’s conservative incumbent Daniel Noboa and leftist lawyer Luisa González advance to presidential runoff - 27 mins ago
-
Atlanta Hawks’ Trae Young added to NBA All-Star Game as injury replacement - 42 mins ago
-
Taylor Swift Fan at Super Bowl Goes Viral for Response to Booing at Singer - 44 mins ago
-
Hungarian Youth Conference Celebrates 25th Anniversary - 47 mins ago
-
Orbán calls for the ‘elimination of the Soros network’ - 56 mins ago
-
Microsoft Teams is becoming a prime target for sophisticated scammers - about 1 hour ago
-
How a land law sparked Elon Musk’s accusations of ‘genocide’ against his home country - about 1 hour ago
-
Colorful Array of Carnival Activities at Lake Balaton - about 1 hour ago
China hits back at 10% U.S. tariff with its own levies on U.S. products
HONG KONG — China retaliated immediately Tuesday as a 10% U.S. tariff on Chinese goods went into effect, announcing its own levies of 10% to 15% on some U.S. products.
Starting Feb. 10, China will impose an additional tariff of 15% on coal and liquefied natural gas and a 10% tariff on crude oil, agricultural machinery, large-displacement automobiles and pickup trucks, the government said.
The Chinese announcement came minutes after the U.S. tariff took effect at 12:01 a.m. ET.
“This unilateral tariff hike by the U.S. side seriously violates World Trade Organization rules, does nothing to solve its own problems, and undermines normal China–U.S. economic and trade cooperation,” the Customs Tariff Commission of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, said in a statement.
Trump announced the tariff Saturday along with 25% tariffs on goods imported from Canada and Mexico, citing border security, as well as the illicit international flow of drugs such as fentanyl. Though the Canadian and Mexican tariffs have been paused for 30 days after talks with those countries’ leaders, no such deal appears to have been struck with China.
Mainland Chinese markets remain closed for the Lunar New Year holiday. Other Asia-Pacific markets were up earlier Tuesday on news that the Canadian and Mexican tariffs had been put on hold, CNBC reported.
Source link