CTA, ITI, Remote-Control Makers Among Tech Reps to Testify Against Tariffs on Chinese Imports
Several tech industry allies will testify Tuesday against 25 percent Trade Act Section 301 tariffs on imports from China on the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative's first of two days of hearings, said a new witness list. Sage Chandler,…
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CTA vice president-international trade, will speak, as expected (see 1807200059). Logitech and Universal Electronics will argue for excluding remote controls and other devices imported from China, their comments in docket USTR-2018-0018 showed. The “vast majority” of Universal’s remotes are manufactured in Chinese factories that Universal owns and operates, said CEO Paul Arling, who will testify. Imposing the additional duties on those products “would cause disproportionate economic harm to U.S. interests, including small- or medium-size businesses and consumers,” by forcing higher subscription costs for pay-TV and over-the-top services, said Arling. Many of the spare parts and components U.S. companies import from China “are in fact made by other U.S. companies,” said Jonathan Davis, global vice president-industry advocacy at Semi, which represents electronics industry supply-chain interests. Those companies hold on to their own intellectual property and “only perform low-value manufacturing in China, while the high value-added work is completed in the United States,” said Davis. Josh Kallmer, senior vice president-global policy at the Information Technology Industry Council, will testify for excluding several tariff lines on diodes and integrated circuits, he told the USTR. David Isaacs, Semiconductor Industry Association vice president-government affairs, who will testify on the same panel as Kallmer, said that such tariffs on semiconductors would “fail to address problematic Chinese forced tech transfer and IP theft. Chinese companies export almost no semiconductors to the U.S. market. Most U.S. semiconductor imports from China are semiconductors designed and manufactured in the U.S., and then shipped to China for the final stage."