NCC: Tariffs Would Harm U.S./China Cotton Trade

In a statement issued April 4, the National Cotton Council expressed concern that China’s announcement of significantly higher proposed tariffs on U.S. raw cotton shipped to that country would significantly harm the economic health of the U.S. cotton industry.

For the current 2017 crop year, China stands as the second largest export market with purchases of approximately 2.5 million bales of U.S. cotton.

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“I cannot overstate the importance of China’s market to U.S. cotton farmers and the importance of U.S. cotton in meeting the needs of China’s textile industry,” NCC Chairman Ron Craft said. “The cotton industries of the United States and China enjoy a healthy, mutually beneficial relationship.”

According to the USDA Foreign Agriculture Service GAIN Report, cotton has been listed among multiple U.S. agricultural products that could potentially be hit with higher tariffs from China – specifically an in-quota tariff that would increase from 1% to 26%.

Following the announcement, the cotton market reacted accordingly, dropping almost limit down on nearby contracts.

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The GAIN Report noted that China’s proposal of retaliatory tariffs on selected U.S. agricultural products is in response to the recent U.S. proposed tariffs on Chinese imports resulting from the Section 301 investigation into the forced transfer of U.S. technology and intellectual property.

Craft said the NCC strongly encourages the two governments to engage in immediate discussions “that can resolve trade tensions and preserve this long-term collaborative relationship. The U.S. cotton industry stands ready to assist the U.S. government and our trading partners in China to find a resolution to this damaging trade dispute.”

 

Source – National Cotton Council

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Avatar for David Brooks David Brooks says:

I despise an article like this. It has the same tone as left media portrayals the day following the Chinese announcement. You make note of the market decline that day but you make no mention of what it did the very next day. The Ag sector, at-risk farmers in particular, have to be a common-sense stabilizing influence in an environment where partisanship and the panic button are first reactions to any issue. Who among us believes the Chinese will forsake a $500 billion trade surplus with US? They have already moderated several tariffs since discussions began. In my opinion, President Trump‘s actions have been fantastically beneficial to the US economy. At the end of the day our country will be better off with reduced trade barriers among our trading partners. Free trade is a two way street.

[…] is currently the second-largest buyer of American cotton. China bought approximately 2.5 million bales, or $976 million worth of U.S. cotton in […]