Metal Tariffs and Trade Wars

METAL TARIFFS AND TRADE WARS

The proposed Metal Tariffs will have an impact on many industries, but it will hit the HVAC industry very hard and the consumers will ultimately be the ones to pay higher prices for their air conditioning and heating systems. With the R22 refrigerant being banned and unusable after 2020, people in need of a new A/C and heating system would be wise to look at replacing as soon as possible to avoid paying higher rates on the equipment caused by the metal tariffs. Most HVAC companies work with financing companies to make the investment in a new air conditioning and heating system more manageable for consumers.

From BBC.com:
The US has since said it was “cautiously hopeful” that the two economic giants could come to an agreement on trade issues.

Mr. Azevedo told the BBC’s HardTalk program that while a global trade war had not yet been initiated, the world was “seeing the first movements towards it”.

Earlier this month the US announced broader metal tariffs on steel and aluminum imports which affected many nations including China. Beijing responded with its own set of proposed tariffs.

The scale of damage done to the global economy, and its rate of expansion, would depend on what the trade war encompassed, Mr. Azevedo said.

Media captionWATCH: WTO’s Roberto Azevedo: https://www.bbc.com/news/business-43564714

We want to avoid a trade war. “If it’s just limited to steel and aluminum, it’s one thing. If you’re talking about hundreds and thousands of products, it’s a completely different thing. And the impact will be significantly different.”

But he said there was little doubt that the trade clash was a “big problem”. “I don’t think anybody believes that this is something minor, even in the US administration.

“These conversations are ongoing precisely because people are beginning to understand, I hope, how serious this is and the kind of impact this could have on the global economy.”

Washington has also has launched a complaint against China for breaking basic patent rights rules at the WTO – a body that Mr. Trump has said is a “catastrophe” and “a disaster” for the US.

Mr. Azevedo said the clashes between the US and China were some of the most difficult moments the WTO had faced in its 23-year history.

“If not the toughest, one of the toughest, yes for sure,” he said.

“Given the nature of the challenges before the [WTO] system, where it comes from and so on, it’s really tough right now.”

But he said that despite some rhetorical statements that pointed towards the US wanting to leave the WTO altogether, there was no indication this was going to happen and that there were “still conversations ongoing and still negotiations ongoing”.

“Now that doesn’t mean that we should downplay that – you don’t want to be in the war,” he said.

“We want to avoid the (metal tariffs) war so everything that we can do to avoid being in that situation, we must be doing at this point.”

METAL TARIFFS AND TRADE WARS