Frog meat is among the many items imported from China that had been facing tariffs in a few weeks, but now the tariffs are delayed until December.
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The stock market soared Tuesday on news that the Trump administration is postponing some tariffs on Chinese imports this fall, sparing popular consumer items such as cellphones and laptops until after the Christmas shopping season. It’s only a partial reprieve, though. Other Chinese imports will still be hit with a 10% tariff on Sept. 1, as scheduled. The administration reportedly was guided by which products could most easily be obtained outside China. But there were still some head-scratchers on the tariff lists.
These products are among the $112 billion worth of Chinese imports facing a 10% tariff in less than three weeks:
American flags (the U.S. imported more than $6 billion worth of American flags from China last year)
Ski and snowmobile gloves
Nuts in shell
Black and white pepper
Human hair, unworked (the U.S. imported $615,766 worth last year)
An additional $160 billion worth of Chinese imports will be spared a tariff until Dec. 15, to avoid hitting holiday sales. These items include:
Prepared or preserved frog meat
Ice hockey gloves
Shelled nuts
Salt and pepper dispensers made of plastic
Human hair, fashioned into wigs or false beards
Some Chinese imports were dropped from the tariff target list altogether, including:
Bibles (China is the No. 1 source of imported Bibles and other prayer books. These were originally targeted for a 10% tariff, but importers’ prayers for an exemption were granted.)