SECRETARY for Commerce and Economic Development Edward
Yau says Hong Kong is worried about
the worsening trade row between China and the US given that 17 per cent, or
HKD60 billion (US$7.6 billion) worth of Chinese exports in question passed
through the city to the US, and nine per cent, or HKD6 billion, of US exports
were transshipped via the city to mainland China.
"We are worried about the
worsening Sino-US trade dispute and it is a pity to see that the goodwill the
two countries built over the years is being lost," Mr Yau told the SCMP in
a phone interview from Paris, France while on a business tour with Chief
Executive Carrie Lam.
"We fear that the trade war
will become an irreversible step as each side only cares about its own
interests," he said.
Hong Kong also faced an
"unquantifiable impact from the spillover" of the dispute between the
US and Europe, which could lead to trade being diverted from Hong Kong, he
said.
Beijing and Washington are ensnared
in a tit-for-tat trade row, with China on June 19 vowing to use quantitative
and qualitative measures to retaliate if US President Donald Trump's threat to
impose a 10 per cent punitive tariff on US$200 billion worth of Chinese
products went into effect.
Following Mr Trump's announcement on
June 15 to impose 25 per cent tariffs on $50 billion worth of Chinese imports,
Beijing responded by publishing a list of US products - ranging from soybeans
to cars - that it would subject to retaliatory measures of the "same scale
and intensity." Beijing calculated that the value of US product imports
last year was $154 billion.
"Hong Kong can withstand the
tariff tsunami if it continues to develop its regional relationships and
Greater Bay Area and advancing on IT development," said American
Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong president Tara Joseph, referring to
Beijing's plan to develop Hong Kong, Macau and nine cities in Guangdong into a
new economic zone and IT-led powerhouse rivalling Silicon Valley in the US.
According to the Hong Kong
government's trade figures, Asean became the city's second largest trade
partner after mainland China last year in total trade. The Association of Southeast Asian
Nations is an economic bloc comprising Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore,
the Philippines, Thailand, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and
Vietnam.
Federation of Hong Kong Industries chairman Jimmy Kwok said Hong Kong companies in the re-export and
transshipment business would be hit hardest.
"The trade war has spread to food
such as meat and fish, which to some extent will put them in trouble," Mr
Kwok said.
Source : HKSG.
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