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Trump's trade beef with China may backfire on meat

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A key objective of President Donald Trump’s trade war is to pressure Beijing to "buy American", but when it comes to millions of dollars of U. S. meat imports, China may simply take its business elsewhere. Beijing’s retaliatory tariffs on U. S. pork and beef are
A key objective of President Donald Trump’s trade war is to pressure Beijing to “buy American”, but when it comes to millions of dollars of U. S. meat imports, China may simply take its business elsewhere.
Beijing’s retaliatory tariffs on U. S. pork and beef are making them prohibitively expensive and Chinese importers are simply turning to other sources, a trend expected in other sectors as well.
“When the U. S. prices go so expensive after the duties… we will source from other origins,” said Zhang Lihui, Shanghai manager for global meat company PMI Foods.
“Like for beef, we will buy more from Australia, we will buy more from South America, and maybe a little bit more from Canada.”
PMI Foods has already ceased importing cuts of U. S. pork meat into China after Beijing’s tariffs — imposed last month in response to Trump’s initial duties on Chinese goods — drove prices up.
Shifting trade patterns caused by the tariff battle will “definitely” benefit other countries at the U. S.’s expense, Zhang said.
“The Chinese market will certainly look for replacements,” she said.
The outcome of the trade battle, spread across a range of sectors, remains hard to predict. But analysts warn that US exporters will lose significant China business.
The U. S. exported around $140 million worth of pork, beef and related by-products to China in June, before tariffs kicked in, according to the U.

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