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China Businesses Government United States Politics

White House Announces Tech Tariffs, Investment Restrictions on China (axios.com) 248

The White House announced this morning a plan to levy a 25% tariff on $50 billion worth of Chinese tech goods -- with the exact list to be announced next month -- as well as tech investment limits for Chinese nationals and entities. From a report: It also plans to pursue litigation at the World Trade Organization relating to Chinese intellectual property abuses. The big picture: It's a show of force that has surprised some sources close to the White House who believed Trump would defer any aggression towards China until after the North Korea summit. A source close to the White House who has a keen understanding of the internal dynamics on China told me that this is an "initial move in a long negotiation that shows the Chinese Trump is very serious -- and a move to balance the criticism that he was soft on ZTE."
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White House Announces Tech Tariffs, Investment Restrictions on China

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  • And "with the exact list to be announced next month "

    China don't have to worry, next month they will list what and when is going to be effectif hten, China will buy another hotel to Trump and every sanction willbe drop !

  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Tuesday May 29, 2018 @11:59AM (#56693508)

    I'm no lover of Trump's policies. He's an authoritarian ass and enabler to state violence (i.e. "rough them up a bit").

    But I can't bring myself to be upset about this tariff, and think it's a shame that it can't be 100%. Yes. 100%, full cost of the item. People throw too many things out -- I've seen perfectly good electronics on the street due to a damaged power cord or similar minor issue.

    We've become a throw-away society where "used" and "repair" are dirty words, and which produces an unsustainable amount of toxic, poorly recyclable e-waste. Trump may not mean to be an environmentalist, but raising the cost of dirt-cheap disposable electronics is ultimately an environmental good.

    Remember the 80s and 90s, where people kept their TVs for 10-15 years, then handed them down to their college student children?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by atrex ( 4811433 )
      Many consumer electronic devices are beyond the simple repairs of yester-year's picture tube TV sets. Not only are the devices much more complicated than they used to be, the very concept of repair manuals is flat out scarce, and then there's the problem of built-in obsolesce as well.

      We do need a much better electronics recycling program. Part of which would take those devices that are repairable, fix them, and then sell them at low cost of give them to people that don't have, and can't afford to buy ne
      • Disagree. Modern electronics are also more reliable than the TV sets of yesteryear. Failures are typically:

        (1) Broken connectors/cords.
        (2) Broken solder joints to the connectors.
        (3) Loose internal cables.
        (4) Power supply issues (fried capacitors, etc).

        All of which can be easily fixed.

        • Not only is your list incorrect, but vendors don't want to fix even the most miniscule problem. They'd much rather replace than service. This leads to a whole supply chain of secondary returned-items refurbishers but also a huge pile of waste. User-serviceable equipment is nigh impossible. SMT-mounted electronics, crammed to the gills, are hideously difficult to service.

          People are seduced in this over-consuming economy, to buy the latest greatest stuff. Who cares that there's only a scant amount of 4K media

          • Make the SMT-mounted electronics modular. You might not be able to replace an individual IC easily, but you can swap a failed board.
            • Go ahead, wave your magic wand.

              Then don't bitch when you get socket dioding, chips falling out of the freaking socket, corrosion, poor sinusoidal vibration fall-outs, and worse.

              This stuff was NOT DESIGNED TO BE FIXED OR RECYCLED. The whole CE industry is focused this way, because: Wall Street, who is fed by Trump's demons.

              • If your TeeVee is being subjected to severe vibration, you've got other problems.
                • Tell that to moms pacifying their kids with back-of-seat video players, or all those integrated dashes, or people that move from place to place, trying to keep their electronics working.

                  No, you've got other problems: fingers in your ears.

                  • The "integrated dash" thing is pure crap. HOPE those things break at 3 years of age so as to discourage automakers from installing touch-screen junk hardware in their cars. As far as back-seat TVs, my laptop (Thinkpad) has modular design and connectors. Works fine under all sorts of conditions. Why would a TV or tablet given to a sprog in a mommyvan need to be different?
                    • I don't like them either, but see: "magic wand". You and I don't have control over this stuff. It's what the CE people design and sell to the automakers, the airlines, etc etc.

                      The fact is that there's lots of stuff out there that isn't recyclable! Lots of it! Not gonna change unless people understand what kind of mess it makes!

                      Today, on the screen of your laptop, you can design tons of SMT gear from your chair, and have it built and UPS'd to you, all in a couple of days. There are NO MORE solder jockeys in

                    • Power to tax is power to destroy. Let's destroy it, even if it costs US CE jobs. Long term impact on the environment is more important than short term jobs.
                    • Power to tax is granted to permit civil infrastructure and common good. The long term environmental impact is important, but don't forget that this isn't about US jobs, it's about US BRANDS.

                      Trade wars are mostly a fiction, because government accounting isn't transparent, and therefore is an oxymoron. The US subsidizes more industry than China does, especially the military, but the military isn't the only segment-- just look to agricultural supports if you had any question. You should be paying $6+ for a gal

    • I'd mod you up if I could. To add to your comments, we can't have a nationally controlled economy which keeps prices higher than the global average while using offshore labor which pushes salaries (and the means to buy those products) down. It's just not fair to the population and puts a lot of pressure on the middle and lower class.
    • You don't know what the word "authoritarian" really means (in a political context). Trump is gentleman compared to a real authoritarian.

      If you keep calling everyone a "nazi" or "authoritarian" then everybody will get the idea that nazis and authoritarians were not that bad really.

      Btw you will know what authoritarian means when the state starts confiscating succesfull businesses and politicians/journalists get some exotic poison or just plain old get killed in their elevator.


      And also, quite true a
      • Except that the US is bad by (developed, democratic) world standards. We jail 1% of our population. We retain the barbaric death penalty. We jail people for things like UNPAID PARKING TICKETS instead of sending them to civil collections. Apparently, you can't even have a beer on a beach without being harassed by cops, in some states.

        The US is authoritarianism disguised as democracy. They tell us the laws are for our own good.

        And a large proportion of Americans like it that way. Respect the cops! They

        • That doesn't have anything to do with Trump, though. We were still jailing 1% of our population when Obama was president, too.

    • As someone who lives in a country where electronics have import taxes that are 100% and up, you really have no idea what you are asking for, and all the things you listed that it would be good for really are just fantasies. That's not how it works.

    • 100% is way too high. We simply need to put the same tariffs/vats on their goods that they put on western goods. If we do that, then allow China to decide how to deal with this. If they want to keep them on, good. Better yet, would be remove them and we remove ours.
      The problem becomes that China still manipulates their money, subsidies/dumps, and have one of the worse environmental/labor laws. But we really should be dealing with that as well. America needs to bring our environmental laws up to the rest o
  • No suprise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MountainLogic ( 92466 ) on Tuesday May 29, 2018 @12:08PM (#56693582) Homepage
    The tech community in general is more educated and mere diverse (in some ways) than the general population and hence much less will to support trump. Plus tech CEOs are not psychologically the types to kiss the kings ring so yes, he is about to screw tech for both fun and profit. Probably he will use as leverage to extort more personal gain out of Beijing.
    • Re:No suprise (Score:5, Insightful)

      by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Tuesday May 29, 2018 @12:15PM (#56693608)

      A lot of tech people and engineers tend to actually lean conservative and "law-and-order" vs being freewheeling liberals.

      The liberals tend to be the scientists, professors, and artists for some reason.

      • A lot of tech people and engineers tend to actually lean conservative and "law-and-order" vs being freewheeling liberals.

        The liberals tend to be the scientists, professors, and artists for some reason.

        And since the conservatives give us the tarriffs and wage and price controls, who is the liberal in the end?

      • Re:No suprise (Score:4, Informative)

        by Lothsahn ( 221388 ) <Lothsahn@@@SPAM_ ... tardsgooglmailcm> on Tuesday May 29, 2018 @02:47PM (#56694572)
        Not just "for some reason".

        It's highly linked to a personality trait called openness. People who are high in openness are interested and emotionally get benefit/happiness from new ideas, thoughts, and concepts. People with this personality are generally very interested in becoming scientists and professors. Likewise, high openness correlates strongly with liberal political views. Therefore, it makes complete sense that there's a strong correlation between scientists/professors, and liberal political viewpoints.

        Just imagining it makes sense -- conservatives generally want to embrace tradition and liberals want to change the world to make it a better place. Somewhere in the middle is good for society--too much change is chaos, and too little is stagnation.

        Sources:
        https://www.chicagoreader.com/... [chicagoreader.com]
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
      • tech has never leaned conservative or GOP.
        Engineers used to, but not any longer.
        At this time, Trump's backers are uneducated whites, along with old whites.
  • by Ed Tice ( 3732157 ) on Tuesday May 29, 2018 @12:31PM (#56693702)
    I'm sure they will negotiate a solution where her business gets a concession and this goes away. The good thing about corruption is that it's predictable and it's much easier to run a business in a predictable environment.
  • by TheSync ( 5291 ) on Tuesday May 29, 2018 @12:56PM (#56693872) Journal

    Oh man, think about the cheap 3D printers!

  • Outside of military equipment, big-ticket specialty/precision items, airplanes and cars, the US doesn't manufacture many consumer goods anymore, especially tech goods. Unless his next announcement is a nationalization of what little manufacturing infrastructure we have left and a shift to something like war production to force the electronics industry to come back, I don't think the President is thinking this through.

    Even if factory work came down to minimum wage, it would still be too expensive to compete

    • actually, you are wrong on many accounts. We DO a lot of consumer good manufacturing. And with electronics, S. Korea, Japan, and Europe all do a lot.
  • Republicans are all about the free market except when they want to destroy it.

    Quick quiz - Who was the president that put in wage and price controls?

    https://www.cato.org/publicati... [cato.org]

    That's right, Another fine honest Republican, the honorable Richard Nixon.

    On Aug. 15, 1971, in a nationally televised address, Nixon announced, “I am today ordering a freeze on all prices and wages throughout the United States.”

    Wow...... Wage and price freezes. Hey - how'd that work out? Probably as go

  • give me a break (Score:4, Interesting)

    by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Tuesday May 29, 2018 @03:10PM (#56694764) Journal
    This remains a joke. Trump restored ZTE because China gave Ivanka a trademark that she wanted. There has NEVER been such a corrupt president in office as trump. If he wants to be fair, he will put the same tariffs/vats on CHinese goods that they put on western goods. Likewise, he would require that all factories with chinese owners to have 50.1% American ownership. In addition, no more deals will be allowed in china for moving manufacturing over there. IOW, when we develop a product here, it will not be allowed to be manufactured in CHina, or for that matter, for ownership to be transfered to any chinese company.
    Not sure how to deal with their subsidies, dumping, and manipulation, but even this would be a good start.
    Then allow China to deal with it as they see fit. If CHina removes an items, so do we.
    • Trump restored ZTE because China gave Ivanka a trademark that she wanted.

      Hey, he's a better negotiator than that. He waited for China's 500MM dollar check to clear (to Trump Org.).

  • Are we cooperating with China this week, or fighting them? How about North Korea? Is there anybody in the administration with a plan?
  • We'll just switch to the Russian-made routers [slashdot.org].

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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