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From robot vacuums to baby gates, U.S. companies say they need China

The head of Kenneth Cole said 25 percent tariffs would wipe out the company's profits, while a cashmere importer said she could only get the wool from Inner Mongolia.
Image: Containers docked at a port in China's Shandong province on Feb. 14, 2019.
Containers docked at a port in China's Shandong province on Feb. 14, 2019.Chinatopix / AP file

A broad range of companies told a hearing in Washington on Monday that they have few alternatives other than China for producing clothing, electronics, and other consumer goods as the Trump administration prepares 25 percent tariffs on remaining U.S.-China trade.

The comments came on the first of seven days of hearings that began on Monday, held by the U.S. Trade Representative's Office, on President Donald Trump's plan to hit another $300 billion worth of Chinese imports with tariffs.

Sourcing from other countries will raise costs, in many cases more than the 25 percent tariffs, some witnesses told a panel of U.S. trade officials from USTR, the Commerce Department and other federal agencies.

Mark Flannery, president of Regalo International, a Minnesota-based maker of baby gates, child booster seats and portable play yards, said that pricing quotes for shifting production to Vietnam — using largely Chinese-made steel — were 50 percent higher than current China costs, while quotes from Mexico were above that.

"Currently there's no country manufacturing metal baby gates outside of China," Flannery said.

Child safety products such as car seats were spared from Trump's previous tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods, imposed in September 2018. But in the drive to pressure China in trade negotiations, USTR put them back on the list, along with other products spared previously, from flat-panel televisions to Bluetooth headphones.

The proposed list, which will be ready for a decision by Trump as early as July 2, includes nearly all consumer products, and could hit Christmas sales hard, particularly cell phones, computers, toys and electronic gadgets.

Marc Schneider, chief executive of fashion footwear and apparel marketer Kenneth Cole Productions, said 25 percent tariffs would wipe out the company's profits and cost jobs. With China producing 70 percent of the shoes bought in the United States, there were no alternatives, including India and Vietnam, that could match China's quality, price and volume, he said.

"We're going to lower the quality of footwear, raise prices and accomplish nothing by moving it around to other countries," Schneider said.

In a letter addressed to the USTR ahead of Monday's hearing, clothing retailer Ralph Lauren asked for apparel and footwear to be removed from the tariff list, arguing that a rise in duties would lower sales and lead to U.S. workers losing their jobs.

Jean Kolloff, owner of cashmere importer Quinn Apparel, said her reason for opposing the tariffs was more geographical — the Alashan goat that produces light-colored cashmere wool is only found in China's Inner Mongolia region.

"We searched for similar species of goat in an attempt to copy the hair from this animal in other countries or even domestically, but to no avail," she said.

The tariff hearings are underway amid a severe deterioration of U.S.-China relations since Trump accused Beijing in early May of reneging on commitments that had brought the world's top two economies close to a deal to end their nearly year-long trade war.

Since then, Trump raised tariffs to 25 percent on $200 billion of Chinese goods. The $300 billion list of products being reviewed in the hearing would bring punitive tariffs to nearly all remaining Chinese exports to the United States.

Trump has said he wants to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping during the June 28-29 G-20 leaders summit in Japan, but neither government has confirmed a meeting.

The list of more than 300 scheduled witnesses includes representatives from retailer Best Buy, toy maker Hasbro, vacuum cleaner maker iRobot, faucet maker Moen, and other firms and trade groups in a diverse range of industries.