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Apple urges US govt not to impose new tariffs on Chinese imports

Xinhua | Updated: 2019-06-21 14:40
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A view of an Apple store in Grand Central Station in New York, Jan 29, 2019. [Photo/IC]

WASHINGTON - Apple Inc has urged the US government not to impose additional tariffs on its products imported from China, saying that the new round of tariffs would reduce its contribution to the US economy, and hurt the company's global competitiveness.

In a letter to the US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer which was made public on Thursday, the tech giant wrote that the proposed tariffs of up to 25 percent would impact all of its major products, including iPhone, iPad, Mac, AirPods, and AppleTV.

"We urge the US government not to impose tariffs on these products," the company said in the letter dated June 17, noting that it's one of the largest job creators in the country, and also the largest US corporate taxpayer to the US Treasury.

"US tariffs on Apple's products would result in a reduction of Apple's US economic contribution," it said.

The tech giant argued that US tariffs would also "weigh on" its global competitiveness, "tilting the playing field in favor of our global competitors."

The proposed tariff list also covers the parts and batteries used to repair products in the United States, as well as accessories that the company makes for these devices, such as monitors and keyboards, the company wrote.

Apple's letter was released as a seven-day hearing over the Trump administration's threatened additional 25-percent tariffs on $300 billion worth of Chinese products enters its fourth day, when representatives from chemical, health and bicycle industries, among others, gathered to make comments on the proposed tariff increase.

In a testimony earlier this week, the US Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) expressed its deep concern with the proposed tariffs, saying that the economic consequences for the US IT industry will be "crippling," if tariffs on key consumer IT products are implemented.

Imposing tariffs on virtually all IT products imported from China would decrease the US IT market by $70 billion over 2019 and 2020, dragging down the US IT spending by nearly 3 percent, according to SIA.

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