US business group urges Donald Trump to delay new China tariffs coming 'at the worst possible time'

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A broad coalition of American industry associations on Wednesday appealed to US President Donald Trump to delay new tariffs on imports from China, arguing that the punitive measures against Beijing "come at the worst possible time".

Some 150 business groups comprising an umbrella organisation called Americans for Free Trade sent a letter on Wednesday to Trump, to fight tariffs of 15 per cent on US$300 billion of Chinese imports to the US, many of them consumer goods.

Those tariffs, which were earlier set to be 10 per cent, moved a step closer on Tuesday as the US government scheduled an official filing confirming the move. US tariffs of 25 per cent already apply to some US$250 billion worth of imports from China.

"We are writing with an urgent request that you postpone all tariff rate increases on Chinese goods that are scheduled to take effect this year," Americans for Free Trade said in the letter.

"These tariff rate increases " some starting as early as Sunday " come at the worst possible time, right in the middle of the busy holiday shipping period.

"Action is needed by you to protect American businesses, workers and consumers this holiday season."

The coalition comprises a wide range of businesses and interests " including the American Petroleum Institute, the Telecommunications Industry Association, which counts AT&T and Apple as members, PeopleforBikes, a non-profit cycling advocacy organisation, and the National Fisheries Institute.

Former White House advisor Steve Bannon, one of Washington's most vocal critics of US engagement with China, dismissed the appeal from industry groups.

"Capitalism is adaptive, so Wall Street will adapt," Bannon, who served as chief White House strategist for the first seven months of Trump's administration, said in an emailed response to questions.

"It is never a 'good time' to move for globalist manufacturing companies that chased the slave labor of China," Bannon added. "The President is adamant, and they've been warned " the supply chains must come home."

Americans for Free Trade was formed nearly a year ago in response to the bilateral trade war that Trump started in July 2018 to force China to take measures to reduce its trade surplus with the US, provide more access to its markets for American companies and ease technology transfer requirements as a prerequisite for doing business in China.

The group's letter ratchets up the pressure on the Trump administration, which has come under criticism for sending conflicting messages about whether the president is open to a resolution in the trade stand off and mounting penalties US companies are paying for Chinese goods.