China-US Trade War: Trade dispute threatens to dampen holiday shopping season
Updated 10:50, 27-Nov-2018
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02:30
The US is facing its own brand of retail issues, due to the trade war between the US and China. CGTN's Jim Spellman reports.  
As the holiday shopping season gets underway, U.S. consumers are facing higher retail prices on some items, - as the effects of the ongoing US-China trade dispute are being felt.
"Potentially the impact of the tariffs could be bad."
Jonathan Gold is a Vice President at the National Retail Federation.
JONATHAN GOLD, VICE PRESIDENT NATIONAL RETAIL FEDERATION "As those tariffs go up, we are going to see more and more of these products with a tariff on it. Consumers are going to start seeing an impact."
Over the summer, President Trump placed a 25 percent tariff on 50 billion dollars' worth of Chinese goods. In September, he hit another 200 billion dollars' worth of Chinese goods with a 10 percent tariff.
JONATHAN GOLD, VICE PRESIDENT NATIONAL RETAIL FEDERATION "Unfortunately with the tariff policy we have in place now, simple basics like T-shirts and underwear still have a pretty high tariffs and that hurts lower-income consumers the hardest."
Higher prices for basic necessities means some consumers will have less money for holiday purchases, ultimately threatening US jobs.
GARY SHAPIRO, CEO CONSUMER TECHNOLOGY ASSOCIATION "When products cost more, people buy less of it. When people buy less of it, there's less demand. That means fewer people that would be employed getting that product into the marketplace. So based on existing and the proposed tariffs that are out there, several hundred thousand jobs will be lost in the US economy."
Trump has threatened more tariffs - vowing to increase the current 10 percent level on the 200 billion dollars' worth of Chinese goods - to 25 percent on January first -- and threatening new tariffs on all remaining Chinese imports. This staggered approach will limit the pinch holiday shoppers feel, but retailers especially small businesses will feel the pain.
JONATHAN GOLD, VICE PRESIDENT NATIONAL RETAIL FEDERATION "When you get to 25% companies are not going to be able to absorb that cost. It's going to be a pretty big hit. When you look at the retail industry as a whole, profit margins range from 2 to 3%. So not very big and especially for the small and medium size guys."
But the Trump administration has recently sounded more optimistic that a deal may come soon.
LARRY KUDLOW, DIRECTOR NATIONAL ECONOMIC COUNCIL "We are now communicating at all levels. And that's a very good thing."
JIM SPELLMAN WASHINGTON "President Trump will sit down with Chinese President Xi Jinping while both are in Argentina for the upcoming G20 summit. Prospects for a trade deal are anything but clear - but shoppers here in the U.S. will no doubt have a much happier holiday season - if the two leaders can bridge their differences. Jim Spellman, CGTN, Washington."