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Hefty new tariffs on some furniture will mean sticker shock

  • Hefty new tariffs on some furniture will mean sticker shock for customers

    Hefty new tariffs on living room furniture from China are delivering severe sticker shock for Canadian buyers and retailers, and Art DeFehr can understand their angst. But the Winnipeg-based furniture manufacturer who initiated the trade case that led to the duties is looking at a bigger picture.To get more news about customized furniture, you can visit beour.com official website.

    He’s trying to breathe life into a Canadian industry that has suffered badly from years competing on an uneven playing field with Chinese producers. He’s also attempting to restore enough hope to justify creating hundreds of new jobs in his hometown – rather than taking them to Mexico.

    Mr. DeFehr is owner and executive chairman of Palliser Furniture, one of Canada’s biggest makers of sofas, chairs, sectionals, ottomans and the like. Last month, the Canada Border Services Agency issued a preliminary ruling on a complaint spearheaded by Palliser. It alleged that China and Vietnam have been harming this country’s manufacturers by “dumping,” or sending heavily subsidized furniture to Canada at prices even cheaper than in the countries’ domestic markets. The CBSA agreed in a big way, assigning provisional duties as high as 296 per cent on some Chinese exporters, and up to 101 per cent on some Vietnamese suppliers.

    The ruling flew under the radar at first, but has begun to make the news as consumers have seen price tags on affected goods as much as tripling. With China responsible for more than half of Canada’s $700-million-a-year market for the types of furniture included in the case – leather-covered and “motion” furniture, such as recliners and swivel chairs – the effect will be hard to avoid, especially for retailers and customers at the low-price end of the market.
    We got to the point where Canada was becoming unprofitable. ... We faced a choice. if I didn’t get a different structure in Canada, I really should shut it down and do everything out of Mexico. I didn’t want to do that. We’ve been here 75 years,” Mr. DeFehr said in an interview Wednesday.

    The case that he built over the past four years, leading up to the CBSA ruling, strikes a blow for the $1.6-billion-a-year Canadian upholstered furniture industry that has been bleeding market share to cheap Chinese imports for years. A couple of decades ago, Canadian manufacturers made more than half of the upholstered household furniture sold in this country; today, it’s less than 20 per cent. Palliser itself has shrunk from six Canadian manufacturing plants to just one, reducing its domestic production by about two-thirds. (Palliser does operate plants in Mexico to supply the U.S. market.)

    Chinese manufacturers have become particularly aggressive in pursuing Canadian market share over the past few years, and have increasingly relied on undercutting domestic producers on cost to do so. And it’s not just a story of cheap labour; Chinese industrial supports have paved the way. The CBSA investigation identified 26 different Chinese government subsidy programs that benefit upholstered furniture manufacturers and exporters.

     

    Mr. DeFehr cites just one example of subsidized input costs that give Chinese manufacturers an unfair advantage. TDI, the primary petrochemical used in the urethane foam filling for upholstered furniture, is 60 per cent cheaper in China than in the United States, even though it is produced in both countries using oil purchased at world prices. “With materials, they start off with a cost base that’s 40 to 60 per cent lower,” he said.

      April 3, 2022 9:12 PM MDT
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