Drumpf enthusiasts

You’ll love this…Drumphanomics

[SIZE=7]Trump’s Tariffs Are Already Costing American Jobs[/SIZE]

President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs are already claiming their first American victims. But it isn’t Chinese duties causing the damage ― at least, not yet. It’s Canadian ones.
Tariffs imposed by the U.S. Commerce Department on Canadian newsprint in January and increased in March have caused the price of the paper product to skyrocket as much as 32 percent, hitting an already cash-strapped newspaper industry.

As a result, the Tampa Bay Times, which has won 12 Pulitzer Prizes, is being forced to lay off about 50 staffers, the Tampa Bay Business Journal reported Wednesday.
The paper’s CEO, Paul Tash, offered a frank assessment of the duties’ effect in a letter to readers published late last month, noting the Times uses 17,000 tons of newsprint a year. Thanks to Trump’s tariffs, the cost per ton of newsprint is now $800 instead of $600, upping the paper’s yearly bill by $3.4 million.

“Payroll is the only expense that is bigger than newsprint,” Tash wrote. “To help offset the extra expense of paper, publishers will eliminate jobs. Make no mistake: These tariffs will cause layoffs across American newspapers, including this one.”
[INDENT][SIZE=5]"Make no mistake: These tariffs will cause layoffs across American newspapers, including this one.[/SIZE][/INDENT]
Oddly, according to the News Media Alliance, an industry group, the higher duties weren’t even championed by most American producers of newsprint, most of whom have transitioned to other paper products as demand has plummeted.

Instead, Trump’s Commerce Department imposed the tariff at the urging of just one newsprint mill in the Pacific Northwest: North Pacific Paper, or Norpac. The company is owned by a New York hedge fund, One Rock Capital.

Norpac’s mill in Washington employs about 260 people. An estimated 600,000 American jobs are in the newspaper publishing and commercial printing industry, CNN estimates.

The company didn’t immediately respond to questions from HuffPost, including if there’s anything the company would like to tell staffers at the Tampa Bay Times who are losing their jobs because of its successful lobbying.

“What we’re seeing with the newsprint tariffs is not a government acting to try to better the economy for its citizens,” notes News Media Alliance President David Chavern.

“Instead, it is ‘political arbitrage’ by one private investment group — where they are effectively looking to use the U.S. government to tax local and community newspapers across the United States in order to bolster their own bottom line.”

[ATTACH=full]166977[/ATTACH]

Hehehehehehe! Drumpf has no capacity to understand what impact his impulsive behaviour has.

He’s running the most complex economy in the world like a primitive dictator - come to think of it, it’s how you run a cattle ranch…

ANOTHER CHINESE OEM DOWN —
[SIZE=7]ZTE exports ban may mean no Google apps, a death sentence for its smartphones[/SIZE]
[SIZE=6]Chinese OEM’s export ban also means the US will have to wait for Android Go.[/SIZE]
RON AMADEO - Yesterday at undefined

[ul]
[li]ZTE[/li][/ul]

[ul]
[/ul]
The US government is going after another Chinese Android device maker. After shutting downHuawei’s carrier deals and retail partners, the government is now pursuing ZTE. The US Department of Commerce has banned US companies from selling parts and software to ZTE for seven years.
ZTE was caught violating US sanctions by illegally shipping telecommunications equipment to Iran and North Korea. The company then made things worse by “making false statements and obstructing justice, including through preventing disclosure to and affirmatively misleading the US Government,” according to the Department of Commerce. The company reached a settlement with the government, agreeing to pay up to $1.2 billion in penalties and discipline the employees involved in the sale.
Recently, the Commerce Department found ZTE was not complying with this settlement, which triggered the next part of the agreement: a seven-year ban on US exports to ZTE. The company is no longer allowed to use US components and, possibly, software in its devices.
[SIZE=5]ARS TRENDING VIDEO[/SIZE]
[SIZE=5][B]Ars Live: Episode 21 - The Tech Boom and the Fate of Democracy[/B][/SIZE]

[I]Reuters[/I] estimates that “25 percent to 30 percent” of the components in ZTE devices come from the US. One big supplier is Qualcomm, which owns a very large chunk of the SoC market and tons of cellular connectivity patents in the US. Estimates given to Reuters put Qualcomm’s chips in 50 to 65 percent of ZTE devices. Qualcomm is dominant in the US, but worldwide ZTE could possibly survive by just using Taiwan-based MediaTek SoCs in every device.
[SIZE=6]Android-free[/SIZE]

[SIZE=5]FURTHER READING[/SIZE]
New “Android Go” phones show how much you can get for $100
The latest news from Reuters raises even bigger issues for ZTE, though. A source told Reuters that “The Commerce Department decision means ZTE Corp may not be able to use Google’s Android operating system in its mobile devices.”

Android is free and open source and will probably remain free for ZTE to use without Google’s involvement. Reuters’ source is probably referring to the Google apps, which aren’t sold to device makers but are carefully licensed to them in exchange for other concessions. The Google apps package includes popular services like Gmail and Google Maps, and it also unlocks the Play Store, Google Play Services, and the entire Android app ecosystem. For a market-viable Android device, the Play Store is pretty much mandatory in every country other than China. So while ZTE could conceivably source hardware components from non-US sources, being locked out of the Play Store would devastate ZTE’s smartphones worldwide.
The text of the export denial order certainly implies a software ban. The order says ZTE is “incapable of being, or unwilling to be, a reliable and trustworthy recipient of US-origin goods, software, and technology” and “may not, directly or indirectly, participate in any way in any transaction involving any commodity, software, or technology exported or to be exported from the United States…”
ZTE is mostly a low-end device maker that doesn’t make a lot of noise in the tech media. Despite that, it still managed to be the number-four smartphone seller in the US, thanks to deals with the four big carriers. The company started to gain publicity in the tech news cycle with the Axon 7 launch in 2016. In a similar vein to OnePlus devices, the Axon 7 combined a high-end SoC (the Snapdragon 820) and other “good enough” specs at a $400 price point. The company never followed up the Axon 7 with a true successor, though. Lately, ZTE has been producing crazy concept devices like the dual-screen Axon M and the dual-notched “Iceberg” concept.

[SIZE=5]FURTHER READING[/SIZE]
You can officially buy an Android Go phone in the US
ZTE was most recently in the news for being Google’s sole US launch partner for Android Go. Android Go is a revamped Android package from Google designed to run on super low-end phones with 1GB of RAM or less. Google has tweaked Android and built several new “Go” Google apps from scratch with low-end devices in mind. While worldwide there are several OEMs creating Android Go devices, the ZTE Tempo Go was the only device planned for the US at launch.

The $80 Tempo Go went on sale on March 30 and quickly sold out in about a day. Since then, the device has been listed as “Out of stock” on ZTE’s website. Since the devices use a Qualcomm SoC and Google software, is the Tempo Go dead after a single day on sale? The device came with Verizon CDMA bands, which lead to speculation that it would soon be offered in Verizon stores. But now that is surely not happening. Google will no doubt have other OEMs onboard with Android Go launches in the US eventually, but for now, it seems like ZTE’s ban means any consumers looking for an Android Go phone will have to wait. For now, there are no other launches we know about.
ZTE seems more or less doomed. We still managed to buy a ZTE Tempo Go on the single day it was for sale, so in addition to having what is probably now an ultra-rare smartphone, we’ll have an Android Go review up soon.

-ars Technica

Hehe hadi gazeti moja firing 50 people you blame it on trump…

Newspaper sales are slumping everywhere. So hata juzi vile nation fired staff, that’s uhuru’s fault? No wonder wanaitwa fake news.

Probably hr wa hio gazeti aliamka jana na list but couldn’t find a reason enough to fire those 50 guys. “Shit I’ve got it. I’ll blame it on Trump and his tariffs.”

Hio ndio itakuwa the new excuse.

Plain protectionism couched in geopolitical excuses…

The $80 Tempo Go went on sale on March 30 and quickly sold out in about a day. Since then, the device has been listed as “Out of stock” on ZTE’s website.

Aha! I bet that deeper investigations would expose a lobby of Drumpf political donors somewhere, just as with the newsprint story. ZTE, like Huawei, was doing a bit too well.

@Purple,

Why do you take things personally? Usiwe the female version of Wamafeelings on Ktalk.