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Smartphones, TVs, Some Chinese Tech Products Will Face 25% Tariffs

Some smartphones and TVs from China imported to the U.S. under the 8528.72.64 Harmonized Tariff Schedule are on the list of goods the U.S. will subject to 25 percent duties, as are a broad assortment of other consumer tech goods,…

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said an Office of U.S. Trade Representative notice Monday. The $300 billion in goods on the list (see 1905130022) are the biggest tranche of the four so far and represent virtually all of the remaining Chinese imports not previously dutied. A single day of public hearings on the proposed duties is set for June 17. The notice appears to be flexible on scheduling additional days of hearings. Roughly 350 witnesses testified on the List 3 tariffs in hearings that spanned six days in late August. June 10 is the due date for filing requests in docket USTR-2019-0004 at regulations.gov to appear at the hearing and place in the record a summary of expected testimony at the public hearing. Written comments are due June 17. Smartphones are the largest of eight classifications of consumer tech products that would bear the biggest brunt of the penalties, CTA Vice President-International Trade Sage Chandler emailed us Tuesday. “The import values of the products that hit our members are massive.” The customs value of smartphones imported from China last year under the HTS 8517.12.00 subheading exceeded $44.8 billion, said Chandler. Laptops and tablets imported under HTS 8471.30.01 were the next biggest category germane to CTA members, she said, worth $38.7 billion. The broad assortment of goods imported under HTS 8517.62.00 was worth $23.9 billion in 2018 customs value, she said, with smart speakers, Bluetooth headphones, smartwatches and fitness trackers included. Current tariffs have “hurt consumers, rattled supply chains for U.S. manufacturers and businesses, and created uncertainty across economies,” said Naomi Wilson, Information Technology Industry Council senior policy director-Asia. “Additional tariffs threaten to needlessly escalate this conflict.” On the big hit smartphones stand to take should the tariffs go through, CTIA declined comment for now. It may have something to say “in coming days as we discuss further with members,” emailed a spokesperson. AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon didn’t comment, nor did Apple or Samsung.