Here’s what we know so far about US-China trade war
1. Total hikes in US-China trade war
Trump has now raised the tariff on Chinese goods five times since taking office in January, the Associated Press reported. The first two hikes of 10 percent each were met with what analysts described as a measured response from China that left the door open for talks.
Trump then announced an additional 34 percent duty on Chinese goods last week in his ‘Liberation Day’ speech. China matched that with a 34 percent tariff on imports from the US.
Trump then added a 50 percent tariff on goods from China, saying negotiations were terminated. That brought the cumulative US tariff on Chinese goods to 104 percent. China responded by raising the tariff on American products by the same amount, bringing its total rate to 84 percent.
Then Trump further hiked the American tariff to 125 percent, saying it would take effect “immediately”.
Now, a White House official confirmed to CNBC on Thursday that the US tariff rate on Chinese imports now effectively totals 145 percent as Trump’s 125 percent tariff comes on top of a 20 percent fentanyl-related tariff that Trump previously imposed on China.
2. China says ‘will not flinch if…’
Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Lin Jia said on Thursday that Beijing is not looking to fight a trade war, but will not flinch if tariff hostilities escalate to that point, according to Chinese news outlet Xinhua. His comments came in response to Trump’s threat to impose further levies on imports from China.
“A just cause enjoys the support of many,” Lin said, noting that the US. actions are unpopular and will end in failure. “We will never sit idly by and watch while the legitimate rights and interests of the Chinese people are infringed, nor will we sit idly by as international economic and trade rules and the multilateral trading system are undermined,” the spokesperson said.
He stressed that if the US side insists on a tariff war or a trade war, China will fight to the end.
3. China speaks with Saudi Arabia, South Africa
China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao held discussions with his Saudi Arabian and South African counterparts to exchange views on responding to the United States’ “reciprocal tariffs”, the Chinese ministry said on Friday.
China discussed strengthening bilateral economic and trade cooperation with Saudi Arabia and South Africa, Reuters reported. The conversations took place over separate video calls on Thursday.
4. ‘Dumping US government bonds’
Traders said Japan and China may be dumping US government bonds and that the developments could be concerning to the White House, according to Reuters.
5. Trump’s China tariff critics ‘insane’
Vice President JD Vance accused some of Trump’s China tariff critics of being “insane”. “There is a category of DC insider who wants to fight an actual war with China but also wants China to manufacture much of our critical supply,” Vance writes in a post on social media platform X.
“This is insane,” the vice president said. “President Trump wants peace, but also wants fair trade and more self-reliance for the American economy,” he added.
6. ‘Trump tariff policy violates WTO rules’
Earlier on Wednesday, China expressed grave concern and firm opposition to the United States’ “reckless” tariffs at the World Trade Organization (WTO). China slammed the US tariff policy, saying it violates WTO rules and undermines the multilateral trading system, Xinhua News reported.
On the first day of a two-day meeting of the Council for Trade in Goods, China proposed a discussion on the US “reciprocal tariffs,” urging the US to uphold the WTO rules, so as to avoid negative impact on global economy and the multilateral trading system.
The “reciprocal tariffs” will never be a cure for trade imbalances. Instead, they will backfire, harming the US itself, China said.
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