According to news agency Reuters, Taiwanese manufacturers of cheap Christmas trees and various holiday items claim to have yet to get any orders from US clients and that they fear they won’t even receive any.
The pause comes as US import tariffs are rising, with US President Donald Trump increasing taxes on Chinese products by 104 % this year alone.
Manufacturers in China have expressed issues as their foreign clients reduce, delay, or even halt orders.
” All the purchases are usually finalized by mid-April,” said Qun Ying, who runs a Christmas tree factory in Jinhua, eastern China. He was quoted as saying to Reuters,” But at this time, it’s difficult to tell if any purchases are coming.” Perhaps National consumers didn’t purchase something this season.
Companies are reporting a halt throughout the colorful supply chain. One of her major American buyers, Jessica Guo, who is also based in Jinhua, has just paused a 3 million yuan ($ 408, 191 ) order after spending 400, 000 yuan on materials, said Guo.
She told Reuters,” I anticipate that purchase will soon be cancelled.” My coworkers and I rely on U.S. orders to live. Many people may unavoidably be affected by this. Nobody is able to escape.
Guo noted that there is little local demand for Christmas decorations in China. She said,” Some women’s jobs will be affected by losing the U.S. market.”
Her 10- to 800-square-meter stock typically has 140 employees, with the number growing to 200 during the summertime maximum. She doesn’t anticipate hiring any additional team this season.
Tariffs dark the spirit of the holidays
US retailers import approximately$ 4 billion worth of Christmas decorations from China in the region, which accounts for 80 % of that market. Foreign companies currently sell about half of their investment to the US marketplace. This dependence on one another is currently being tested by the growing business conflict.
Customers in the US was now have fewer products on shelves and prices because taxes have been imposed on nations like Cambodia, which only supply 5.5 % of the country’s Christmas decorations.
One producer told Reuters,” If Americans want fresh Christmas decorations this time, they will have to spend a lot more for them if they can get them on the shelves at all.”
” US purchases will go over,”
Stock user Liu Song is attempting to react in Shaoxing, China, by shifting his focus away from the US.
He claimed that” we are concerned that U.S. orders may fall.” However,” We will undoubtedly get this deal war.”
Song is now focusing on South Asian markets, which now have access to 75 % of his goods, in Russia, Europe, and Southeast Asia.
According to academics, China’s economic expansion may be shaved 1-2 percentage points this year from its trade war. Chinese exporters are likely to cut prices as they lose US orders, keeping prices competitive abroad and putting pressure on already thin profit margins and putting jobs at risk abroad.
We’re a pleasant, pleasant business, we say.
The United States lacks the labor, training, and technology to make it occur, according to Jami Warner, president of the American Christmas Tree Association.
” They surely can’t be made in the United States,” she said. There is no manufacturing, and neither does the labor market nor the systems.
Warner warns that the entire industry has become” collateral damage” in a geopolitical conflict and predicts price increases are inevitable.
What our people produce and sell are not considered proper products, she continued. We don’t make threats,” they say. We operate in a pleasant, cheerful manner. We want to continue operating that joyfully.
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