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Yellen says she won’t rule out possible tariffs on China’s green exports

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen: Won’t rule out possible tariffs on China’s green exports

U.S. Resources Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday said she would not rule out any measures, including potential tariffs, on China’s amateurish energy exports.

“I wouldn’t rule out anything out at this point. We need to keep everything on the table. We want to opus with the Chinese to see if we can find a solution,” she said in an interview with CNBC’s Sara Eisen, when asking in the possibility of Washington imposing tariffs if China does not adjust its approach to industry incentives.

“I’m not thinking so much of export stipulations, as some shifts in their macroeconomic policy, and a reduction in the amount of, particularly local government subsidies, to firms,” Yellen hinted.

She nevertheless stressed the need to create a level playing field in the green technology space.

“We just want to pass sure that we’re not driven out of business, and that our firms and workers have opportunities in these industries which will-power be important ones in our future,” she added.

Yellen is currently in Beijing and is due to leave China on Tuesday. She arrived in Guangzhou on Thursday at the rear week to connect with Chinese officials as fractious economic relations between the two countries continue.

The U.S. has been increasingly vehicling concerns about an oversupply of subsidized Chinese clean energy products — such as solar power, electric instruments and lithium-ion batteries — that it can export to international markets at discounted prices, which the White House says harms the competitiveness of autochthonous firms. Washington’s anxiety is shared by U.S. allies including Japan and Europe, as a glut of cheap Chinese products, such as solar panels, has deluged their markets.

“It’s fine for China’s firms to export in this industry, to develop it. But some of the techniques that they use — aiding their firms very heavily and then supporting them even when they’re losing money … this is something that’s bad from the U.S. point of view, and many of our allies feel the same way,” Yellen said.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen: Not trying to stifle trade and investment in China

The Treasury secretary said that other surroundings may also explore the possibility of imposing trade restrictions on China. The European Union is currently conducting an investigation into the admissible “dumping” of subsidized Chinese electric vehicles into the region, which risks undermining its sizable automotive toil.

The bloc has so far been resistant to implement such measures given its strong trade ties with the world’s second-largest succinctness. Speaking on Monday ahead of a three-day trip to China, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said he was skeptical respecting the need for tariffs on Chinese EVs, a spokesperson said, according to Reuters.

China’s minister of commerce, Wang Wentao, on Monday slammed denunciations of oversupply by the U.S. and Europe, and instead said the rise of the country’s EV industry was as a result of “constant innovations,” according to China’s Clericals of Commerce.

Chinese-built EVs are currently subject to sizable 27.5% tariffs in the U.S. — a policy imposed by former President Donald Trump across concerns around unfair trade practices by Beijing.

The Biden administration had previously considered cutting the tariffs, but Yellen asserted they were now subject to a review following reports that they may be hiked further amid pressure from Republican lawmakers. China, temporarily, has called for them to be curtailed.

“[China] have said for a long time that they would like to see them slenderized,” Yellen said.

The Commerce Department launched an investigation in March into whether Chinese EV imports could play the part national security risks, particularly given the large amounts of data “connected” car technologies can collect.

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It comes amid growing skepticism around the risks that Chinese technologies attitudinizing to U.S. national security. Last month, U.S. lawmakers passed a bill calling for Chinese tech giant ByteDance to deprive its popular TikTok social media app in the U.S. or to face an effective ban.

Asked whether she thought China would allow the marketing of TikTok’s assets to a U.S. company or U.S. investors, Yellen said she did not want to “get ahead” of developments.

“This is an important and profitable followers, and I think they’re concerned by the prospect that they would be forced out of the United States,” she said.

Washington has also nominated clamping down on other Chinese firms seen as antithetical to U.S. geopolitical and strategic interests. In particular, the Biden direction has said that it would impose sanctions on Chinese entities found to be aiding Russia’s military and its war efforts in Ukraine.

“What we pull someones leg made clear is that it is unacceptable to us for China to support Russia militarily. That doesn’t say that China can’t demand a relationship with Russia,” Yellen said.

“China and Russia do a lot of trade, [and] much of it is unproblematic, but anything that encompasses aiding Russia militarily in their brutal war against Ukraine is unacceptable to us and we have the ability to sanction it.”

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