Export Compliance Daily is a Warren News publication.

Element Neutral on Tariffs on TVs From China; It Argued Last Year for 25% Duties

Element Electronics, which assembles LCD TVs in Winnsboro, South Carolina, for sale through Walmart, Target and Costco, hasn’t “taken a position” on whether Section 301 tariffs should be slapped on finished TVs from China, General Counsel David Baer told a…

Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article

Export Compliance Daily combines U.S. export control news, foreign border import regulation and policy developments into a single daily information service that reliably informs its trade professional readers about important current issues affecting their operations.

List 4 hearing June 17, according to a newly posted transcript. Baer spoke at the hearing to urge the removal from List 4 of the LCD panels and motherboards Element sources from China. Even when those goods weren't being considered for tariffs on List 1, Baer appeared at a May 2018 hearing to argue for finished TVs from China to be assessed 25 percent tariffs. Section 301 tariffs have “the potential to level the playing field for Element's U.S. work force and workers across America,” said Baer then. “Element supports the inclusion of finished TVs in the scope of the 301.” Baer said Element had an unfair disadvantage against competitors that imported finished TVs from China at 3.9 percent duties and sourced them from Mexico duty-free, versus the 4.5 percent tariffs it pays to import LCD modules from China. Baer didn’t respond to emails Tuesday seeking comment on why the company changed its position about tariffs on finished TVs from China. List 4 includes proposed tariffs on finished TVs, plus the LCD components Element sources from China.