The Japan Times - Where things stand in the US-China trade war

EUR -
AED 4.031394
AFN 78.47576
ALL 98.502187
AMD 429.164625
ANG 1.964897
AOA 1005.933864
ARS 1180.700585
AUD 1.848666
AWG 1.977017
AZN 1.864996
BAM 1.962138
BBD 2.213732
BDT 133.196
BGN 1.95819
BHD 0.413731
BIF 3210.971414
BMD 1.09758
BND 1.481019
BOB 7.576128
BRL 6.602051
BSD 1.096331
BTN 94.498525
BWP 15.475115
BYN 3.588017
BYR 21512.575527
BZD 2.202274
CAD 1.565484
CDF 3152.251362
CHF 0.928493
CLF 0.02864
CLP 1099.03991
CNY 8.05547
CNH 8.118154
COP 4855.970014
CRC 562.874599
CUC 1.09758
CUP 29.08588
CVE 110.855576
CZK 25.188394
DJF 195.062282
DKK 7.466082
DOP 68.925348
DZD 146.572225
EGP 56.260435
ERN 16.463706
ETB 142.630372
FJD 2.578381
FKP 0.862345
GBP 0.85856
GEL 3.023848
GGP 0.862345
GHS 17.010025
GIP 0.862345
GMD 79.213002
GNF 9509.221534
GTQ 8.468718
GYD 229.843666
HKD 8.527892
HNL 28.12893
HRK 7.530936
HTG 144.423452
HUF 410.404213
IDR 18497.184496
ILS 4.164714
IMP 0.862345
INR 94.318341
IQD 1440.092402
IRR 46221.282277
ISK 145.697214
JEP 0.862345
JMD 173.128853
JOD 0.778176
JPY 159.934474
KES 142.148924
KGS 95.276509
KHR 4396.535673
KMF 494.670916
KPW 987.796529
KRW 1613.985388
KWD 0.337905
KYD 0.910189
KZT 571.883859
LAK 23807.364165
LBP 98679.751928
LKR 325.646668
LRD 219.824085
LSL 21.487642
LTL 3.24087
LVL 0.663915
LYD 5.415554
MAD 10.494586
MDL 19.487022
MGA 5085.31374
MKD 61.744218
MMK 2304.243531
MNT 3852.25263
MOP 8.783509
MRU 43.847525
MUR 49.47983
MVR 16.952373
MWK 1905.439904
MXN 22.908934
MYR 4.915838
MZN 70.044325
NAD 21.487642
NGN 1729.951671
NIO 40.433053
NOK 12.014565
NPR 150.980085
NZD 1.996345
OMR 0.422551
PAB 1.09758
PEN 4.040733
PGK 4.451044
PHP 62.924813
PKR 308.123638
PLN 4.314576
PYG 8805.578123
QAR 3.995299
RON 5.005348
RSD 117.775994
RUB 94.570234
RWF 1570.039737
SAR 4.116335
SBD 9.330138
SCR 15.998105
SDG 658.686866
SEK 11.000511
SGD 1.484016
SHP 0.862526
SLE 24.981228
SLL 23015.713051
SOS 630.138926
SRD 40.141195
STD 22717.697944
SVC 9.603468
SYP 14270.255073
SZL 21.487642
THB 38.137244
TJS 11.932525
TMT 3.839653
TND 3.380923
TOP 2.641087
TRY 41.706677
TTD 7.445813
TWD 36.256472
TZS 2943.58363
UAH 45.227959
UGX 4057.360747
USD 1.09758
UYU 46.708736
UZS 14264.874097
VES 79.118082
VND 28310.481802
VUV 137.262801
WST 3.120653
XAF 659.561221
XAG 0.036943
XAU 0.000368
XCD 2.970696
XDR 0.822541
XOF 659.561221
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.780311
ZAR 21.682646
ZMK 9879.537495
ZMW 30.665433
ZWL 353.420436
  • RBGPF

    -7.7300

    60.27

    -12.83%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.21

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.7100

    34.13

    -2.08%

  • AZN

    -0.8900

    64.9

    -1.37%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    8.38

    +1.79%

  • BTI

    0.1200

    39.55

    +0.3%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    62.74

    -0.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    22.38

    -0.45%

  • SCS

    -0.4600

    9.74

    -4.72%

  • RIO

    -2.2400

    52.32

    -4.28%

  • RELX

    -0.2200

    45.31

    -0.49%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    11.47

    +1.83%

  • BCC

    -1.9600

    89.93

    -2.18%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    8.19

    -1.95%

  • BCE

    -1.2100

    20.87

    -5.8%

  • BP

    -1.0600

    26.11

    -4.06%

Where things stand in the US-China trade war
Where things stand in the US-China trade war / Photo: Jade GAO - AFP

Where things stand in the US-China trade war

China has hit back against US President Donald Trump's "liberation day" tariffs, slapping 34 percent levies on all imports of American goods.

Text size:

AFP looks at how an escalating trade war between the United States and China is playing out -- and what impact it might have.

- Why is China so vulnerable to tariffs? -

Trade between the world's two largest economies is vast.

Sales of Chinese goods to the United States last year totalled more than $500 billion -- 16.4 percent of the country's exports, according to Beijing's customs data.

And China imported $143.5 billion in goods from the United States in 2024, according to the office of the US Trade Representative.

But China has long drawn Trump's ire with a trade surplus with the United States that reached $295.4 billion last year, according to the US Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Beijing's leaders have been reluctant to disrupt the status quo, in part because China's export-driven economy is particularly sensitive to vicissitudes in international trade.

US duties also threaten to harm China's fragile economic recovery as it struggles with a long-running debt crisis in the property sector and persistently low consumption -- a downturn Beijing had sought to slow with broad fiscal stimulus last year.

But an intensified trade war will likely mean China cannot peg its hopes for strong economic growth this year on its exports, which reached record highs in 2024.

"The US tariffs on Chinese imports announced so far this year could fully negate the lift from the fiscal stimulus measures announced so far," Frederic Neumann, Chief Asia Economist at HSBC, told AFP.

- What impact will the new US tariffs have? -

Trump's new tariffs slap 10 percent levies on imports from around the world.

But China has been hit particularly hard -- the latest salvo adds 34 percent to a 20 percent rate imposed last month, bringing the total additional tariffs on imports from the Asian economic powerhouse imposed by this Trump administration to 54 percent.

The tariffs come into effect in stages -- a 10 percentage point bump on Thursday, followed by the full levy on April 9.

China is also under sector-specific tariffs on steel, aluminium and car imports.

Analysts expect the new levies to take a significant chunk out of the country's GDP, which Beijing's leadership hope will grow five percent this year.

Julian Evans-Pritchard, Head of China Economics at Capital Economics, said in a note he expects the economic hit to range from 0.5 to one percent of GDP.

Likely to be hit hardest are China's top exports to the United States -- the country is the dominant supplier of goods from electronics and electrical machinery to textiles and clothing, according to the Peterson Institute of International Economics.

And analysts also warn that because of the crucial role Chinese goods play in supplying US firms, the tariffs may also have major knock-on effects.

"US imports from China are dominated by capital goods and industrial materials instead of consumer goods," Gene Ma, Head of China Research at the Institute of International Finance, told AFP.

"The tariff will hurt US manufacturers as well as consumers."

"This trade war not only has a destructive impact on China but also on the global trade system," Chen Wenling, Chief Economist at the China Center for International Economic Exchanges in Beijing, said.

- How has Beijing responded? -

Beijing made good on its vow of "countermeasures" against the United States on Friday, slapping 34 percent levies on all US products coming into the country in measures that will take effect next Thursday.

It also said it would impose export controls on a number of rare earth elements used in medical technology and consumer electronics.

US exports to China last year were dominated by agricultural products, primarily oilseeds and grains, according to the US-China Business Council.

Oil and gas closely follows, with pharmaceuticals and semiconductors also among major exports.

In 2022, the Council said, over 900,000 American jobs were supported by US exports of goods and services to China.

Those measures come on top of tariffs imposed by Beijing last month -- 15 percent on imports of coal and liquefied natural gas from the United States and 10 percent on crude oil, agricultural machinery, big-engined vehicles and pickup trucks.

Analysts say those moves are designed to hit Trump's support base -- those in rural US heartlands that voted him into office last year.

Beijing has called for "dialogue" to resolve the dispute, but any deal will take time.

"There are still chances for the two parties to resume talks in the following months," Betty Wang at Oxford Economics told AFP.

"But historical experience suggests that tariffs are typically quick to rise and slow to fall."

H.Takahashi--JT