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Chinese tariffs, after a couple of months of going into effect, have cut exports of affected products from some American states to that country by more than 90%, recent data show.

China imposed 25% tariffs on $50 billion worth of U.S. exports, including soybeans, electric vehicles, seafood, and pork, in July, and large passenger cars, motorcycles, and certain chemical products in August. In September, Beijing added a 10% tax on another $60 billion of American products, including liquefied natural gas, coffee, and cooking oil. While the latest tariffs are too recent to have a material effect yet, the first round of Chinese levies are inflicting measurable damage.

American products hit by the 25% tariffs in early July saw their export value fall 61.9% in August to $793 million from $2.1 billion a year ago, according to Panjiva, a global trade data company. For goods taxed in late August, exports for that month were down 22.4% from a year ago, and the tariffs were only in effect for one week.

States heavily exposed to targeted products have suffered significantly. Louisiana’s affected goods represent 80.8% of its total exports to China, and the state’s shipments of the affected goods dropped 90.6% in August to $30 million from $318 million a year ago, notes Panjiva. To be sure, while it might be painful for the affected industries, the macro impact is more muted. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the total value of all of Louisiana’s exports in 2017 was $57 billion. That’s about $4.8 billion a month, on average.

States with less exposure have also seen marked pullbacks in shipments of Chinese-taxed products. Texas’s shipments dropped 54.2% to $255 million in August from $557 million a year ago; South Carolina’s fell 74.5% to $56 million from $220 million; and Kentucky’s tumbled 76.0% to $18 million from $76 million.

If trade tension continues to escalate, other states could feel the pinch, too. New Mexico has less exposure to China’s current list of targeted products, but the state sent 32.5% of its total exports to China during the 12 months prior to August, according to Panjiva. Washington state saw 21.8% of its exports going to China during the same time period, followed by Oregon, South Carolina, and Alabama, which all sit in the teen percentages.

Ideally, the trade war will de-escalate sometime soon, not only for the states, but for the states of the world. On Friday, we noted that higher tariffs are a recipe for weakening the global economy.