The Japan Times - China's leaders gather to hash out Trump tariff battle plans

EUR -
AED 4.02547
AFN 78.958383
ALL 99.102869
AMD 431.181955
ANG 1.961978
AOA 1003.890567
ARS 1184.765046
AUD 1.813586
AWG 1.97271
AZN 1.867466
BAM 1.955265
BBD 2.22659
BDT 133.983319
BGN 1.957778
BHD 0.412787
BIF 3277.602688
BMD 1.09595
BND 1.474296
BOB 7.619914
BRL 6.405394
BSD 1.102698
BTN 94.079244
BWP 15.358795
BYN 3.608812
BYR 21480.619234
BZD 2.215094
CAD 1.559263
CDF 3148.664634
CHF 0.944431
CLF 0.02729
CLP 1047.223301
CNY 7.980215
CNH 7.994999
COP 4582.945323
CRC 557.847278
CUC 1.09595
CUP 29.042674
CVE 110.234821
CZK 25.256829
DJF 196.376238
DKK 7.461451
DOP 69.640934
DZD 146.03502
EGP 55.406831
ERN 16.439249
ETB 145.347308
FJD 2.537019
FKP 0.847795
GBP 0.850992
GEL 3.01429
GGP 0.847795
GHS 16.970527
GIP 0.847795
GMD 78.997119
GNF 9480.074229
GTQ 8.45127
GYD 228.536272
HKD 8.520633
HNL 28.038338
HRK 7.531044
HTG 143.530764
HUF 404.54591
IDR 18346.949665
ILS 4.100568
IMP 0.847795
INR 93.650132
IQD 1430.891791
IRR 46360.405806
ISK 144.204462
JEP 0.847795
JMD 172.42419
JOD 0.777072
JPY 161.061946
KES 141.527433
KGS 95.002298
KHR 4365.330633
KMF 489.529208
KPW 986.361205
KRW 1599.015607
KWD 0.337157
KYD 0.910826
KZT 556.162432
LAK 23685.841231
LBP 98372.711411
LKR 324.07413
LRD 218.985421
LSL 20.902803
LTL 3.236056
LVL 0.66293
LYD 5.289988
MAD 10.429326
MDL 19.551233
MGA 5069.578931
MKD 61.05679
MMK 2300.919896
MNT 3846.361639
MOP 8.775473
MRU 43.593447
MUR 49.000806
MVR 16.923331
MWK 1897.317993
MXN 22.386696
MYR 4.861215
MZN 70.003894
NAD 20.902803
NGN 1681.066767
NIO 40.290501
NOK 11.790932
NPR 149.910449
NZD 1.95777
OMR 0.421946
PAB 1.09595
PEN 4.037053
PGK 4.46999
PHP 62.764717
PKR 306.904853
PLN 4.245513
PYG 8757.469729
QAR 3.989667
RON 4.952931
RSD 116.586887
RUB 93.840941
RWF 1555.449869
SAR 4.110221
SBD 9.312612
SCR 15.97682
SDG 658.021292
SEK 10.947921
SGD 1.470849
SHP 0.861245
SLE 24.933268
SLL 22981.523891
SOS 624.324825
SRD 40.248477
STD 22683.951476
SVC 9.589967
SYP 14249.994157
SZL 20.902803
THB 37.792726
TJS 11.899889
TMT 3.833642
TND 3.357047
TOP 2.638671
TRY 41.641737
TTD 7.422798
TWD 36.332658
TZS 2923.758392
UAH 45.158896
UGX 4009.400205
USD 1.09595
UYU 46.167964
UZS 14171.813622
VES 77.086835
VND 28252.54745
VUV 134.896075
WST 3.078778
XAF 652.705611
XAG 0.037037
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.966325
XDR 0.817067
XOF 652.705611
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.409315
ZAR 20.929909
ZMK 9864.868719
ZMW 30.636217
ZWL 352.89544
  • RBGPF

    69.0200

    69.02

    +100%

  • JRI

    -0.8600

    11.96

    -7.19%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    10.68

    -0.56%

  • BCC

    0.8100

    95.44

    +0.85%

  • GSK

    -2.4800

    36.53

    -6.79%

  • NGG

    -3.4600

    65.93

    -5.25%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    22.83

    +0.7%

  • RELX

    -3.2800

    48.16

    -6.81%

  • RIO

    -3.7600

    54.67

    -6.88%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    22.71

    +0.22%

  • BTI

    -2.0600

    39.86

    -5.17%

  • AZN

    -5.4600

    68.46

    -7.98%

  • RYCEF

    -1.5500

    8.25

    -18.79%

  • VOD

    -0.8700

    8.5

    -10.24%

  • BP

    -2.9600

    28.38

    -10.43%

China's leaders gather to hash out Trump tariff battle plans
China's leaders gather to hash out Trump tariff battle plans / Photo: HECTOR RETAMAL - AFP

China's leaders gather to hash out Trump tariff battle plans

China's leadership convenes next week for closed-door meetings to hammer out plans to shield the ailing economy from tariffs and trade threats from US President Donald Trump.

Text size:

The "Two Sessions" gatherings of the country's parliament and top advisory body are primarily talking shops, rubber-stamping decisions made by the Communist Party while giving a veneer of openness and accountability.

But they do offer a rare glimpse into the leadership's priorities and concerns while facing an unpredictable United States -- China's largest trading partner and strategic rival.

All eyes will be on Wednesday's opening of the National People's Congress (NPC) parliament, where Premier Li Qiang will lay out economic growth goals for 2025, offering insights into just how optimistic Beijing is about the year ahead, as well as new military spending.

Analysts polled by AFP broadly agreed that Beijing will set a goal of around five percent growth -- the same as 2024.

Many see that as an ambitious objective given the headwinds China is battling, and Beijing's continued reluctance to inject the economy with the kind of large-scale stimulus observers say it needs.

"From the faltering property market to weak household spending, elevated youth unemployment and tariffs, the economy is having a tough time," Harry Murphy Cruise, head of China and Australia economics at Moody's Analytics, told AFP.

"Any one of those challenges would be a headache for officials; combined, they are a migraine."

- More unpredictable -

Likely top of the agenda is Trump, who in just over a month back in the White House has overturned the international order and proven even more unpredictable than in his first term.

The US president imposed additional 10 percent duties on products imported from China last month and has threatened more.

The move could affect hundreds of billions of dollars in trade and may worsen if the magnate follows through on his threats of even higher customs levies.

A US-led push to squeeze China out of international supply chains for high-tech chips and other sensitive technology -- spearheaded by Joe Biden's administration -- is also expected to ramp up.

That effort has driven Beijing's policy of technological self-reliance, part of a broader initiative by China's leadership to develop "new quality productive forces" that it hopes can boost growth.

Last May, Beijing poured more than $47 billion into the country's largest-ever chip investment fund -- the third phase of an effort that outpaced the first two phases combined.

"Beijing is betting that a massive party-led push for research, innovation, commercialisation, manufacturing and digitalisation can create new economic growth drivers," analysts Neil Thomas and Jing Qian at the Asia Society said in a note.

China hopes it can "replace the real estate sector and generate productivity gains that help mitigate issues related to debt, demographics and dependence on the West", they added.

Analysts also said pressure from Trump could encourage Beijing to step up the kinds of support for the economy seen last year -- interest rate cuts, easing local government debt pressure and expanding subsidy programmes for household goods.

"We expect China to increase policy support in response to greater external shock from the US," Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS, told AFP.

And more "will be rolled out later in the year... should there be additional significant tariffs or other external shocks, or should the property downturn turn worse", she added.

- Property crisis -

Another key issue is weak domestic consumption.

Demand has been a long-running drag on the world's second-largest economy, fuelling a deflationary spiral that has kept prices stubbornly low.

Analysts expect policymakers to broaden the scope of a consumer goods trade-in programme initiated last year that allows shoppers to exchange older home appliances and other items.

That, said Louise Loo of Oxford Economics, "could have an immediate, albeit temporary, impact on retail spending".

But they warn much deeper issues are driving a crisis of confidence in the economy, which long enjoyed double-digit growth but has languished since the pandemic.

The continued crisis in China's vast property sector -- once a key driver of growth but now beset with sprawling debt -- has become emblematic of that malaise.

Last month, new home prices in China's most developed "first-tier" cities fell 3.4 percent year-on-year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

The slide was even more pronounced in second-tier cities, where new home prices dropped five percent on-year in January, and in third-tier cities where prices fell six percent, the data showed.

"Our prognosis of China's problems continues to lie in housing," Oxford Economics' Loo said, pointing to the impact the crisis was having on everything from local government finances to consumer demand.

"Overcoming these powerful negative feedback loops in the economy this year would be policymakers' key task."

Y.Ishikawa--JT