Trump Spares Made-in-USA Apparel With Most Machinery Tariff-Free
Trump Spares Made-in-USA Apparel With Most Machinery Tariff-Free

Trump Spares Made-in-USA Apparel With Most Machinery Tariff-Free

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  • Chinese textile printing machines and looms won’t get levies
  • Still, U.S. clothing and footwear sector fearing retaliation

The clothing and footwear industry was largely spared as the Trump administration slapped tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese imports, but a looming trade war could still do damage to an apparel sector that’s more global than ever.

The actual shirts and shoes imported from China won’t get new tariffs, according to the full list of 1,102 product lines released Friday, and only some of the equipment used to make them, like textile rolling-machine parts and injection molders for shoes, were included in the final list. A host of other Chinese machinery used by American apparel companies that had been on a preliminary tariff list -- like textile printing equipment, sewing machines and looms -- made it through unscathed.

“We applaud the decision to remove most of the equipment and machinery used in our domestic textile, apparel and footwear manufacturing that were proposed by the administration in April,” said Rick Helfenbein, president of the American Apparel & Footwear Association, an industry trade group. “Levying a tariff on these items would have increased costs for domestic manufacturers across our industry, leading to higher prices and lower sales.”

While much of the U.S. apparel manufacturing industry has moved abroad to chase lower labor costs, the country still remains home to a multibillion-dollar textile industry. Many fashion labels and shoemakers, including L.L. Bean Inc., Allen Edmonds and American Giant, still make products domestically. The exclusion of most apparel equipment from tariffs has allayed fears that manufacturers would push higher costs on to consumers.

Retaliation Fears

But while many of the machines used for American-made apparel didn’t make the final list, the industry isn’t out of the woods yet.

“We remain deeply concerned,” Helfenbein said, citing the threat of retaliation. “China previously identified almost $1 billion worth of American cotton exports to China as a target, which will hurt American farmers and U.S. textile manufacturers, and add costs to our supply chains.”

“Ramping up tariffs doesn’t help bilateral trade talks reach a successful conclusion,” he added. “It’s hard to see how anyone benefits from this.”

However, a trade group representing the U.S. textile industry praised the actions, and said the tariffs didn’t go far enough. The National Council of Textile Organizations wants them applied to clothing, high-performance fabrics and home furnishings like carpet to slow the flow of Chinese imports that it claims have hurt the domestic industry.

‘Deterring Effect’

“It would have a greater deterring effect, however, if more textile and apparel end products were included,” NCTO President Auggie Tantillo said in a statement. “NCTO looks forward to working closely with the Trump administration to refine it.”

President Donald Trump’s administration announced the tariffs on Chinese imports early Friday and China has vowed to retaliate. Trump pledged additional tariffs if the country follows through on the threats. The first set of tariffs will total $34 billion and take effect July 6, with another $16 billion still to be reviewed, the U.S. Trade Representative said.

A previous study from the National Retail Federation and the Consumer Technology Association found that imposing tariffs of $50 billion on Chinese imports, coupled with any retaliation, would reduce U.S. gross domestic product by nearly $3 billion and eliminate 134,000 American jobs annually.

“Tariffs are taxes on American consumers, plain and simple,” Matthew Shay, chief executive officer of the NRF, said in a statement Friday. “These tariffs won’t reduce or eliminate China’s abusive trade practices, but they will strain the budgets of working families by raising consumer prices.”

— With assistance by Matthew Boyle, and Matthew Townsend

Source: Bloomberg

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