news
analysis
Trump’s
Tariffs Put China in a Difficult Spot
China chose
swift retaliation for trade measures in the first Trump administration, but
that led to an upward spiral of trade measures and much broader tariffs.
Keith
Bradsher
By Keith
Bradsher
Reporting
from Beijing
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/02/business/trump-tariffs-china.html
Feb. 2,
2025, 12:01 a.m. ET
President
Trump’s decision on Saturday to impose new tariffs on imports from China poses
a dilemma for Beijing’s leaders: Is it better to ignore the new tariffs or
retaliate?
Doing little
runs the risk of looking weak in the eyes of the Chinese people. China’s
extensive domestic propaganda apparatus has described China as a rising power,
while the United States is portrayed as suffering inexorable decline.
But vigorous
retaliation risks starting a global trade war that could damage China more than
the United States. China’s trade surplus — the amount by which its exports
exceeded imports — reached almost $1 trillion last year. Exports, and the
construction of new factories to make further exports, are practically the only
area of strength these days in the Chinese economy.
China’s
initial reaction on Sunday was cautious: the Ministry of Commerce said it would
challenge the tariffs at the World Trade Organization. That body’s
investigative panels can try to embarrass a country that violates international
free trade rules, by criticizing a specific trade action.
But the
W.T.O. has lost much of its power since 2019. The first Trump administration
and then the Biden administration blocked the appointment of judges needed to
authorize countries to take countermeasures.
Some in
China had been relieved that Mr. Trump initially focused his criticisms on
other countries. But few expected that to last.
“I don’t
think we feel optimistic about the future of this relationship,” Wu Xinbo, dean
of the Institute of International Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said
on Thursday. “Given his team of hawks on China, the battle is yet to come.”
On Saturday,
President Trump put additional 10 percent tariffs on goods imported from China,
as well as 25 percent tariffs aimed at Mexico and Canada. He said he might
escalate the tariffs if the countries retaliate.
In its
response, China commerce ministry said it would take “countermeasures to firmly
safeguard its rights and interests.” But the ministry also urged the United
States to “strengthen cooperation.”
China has
shown in the weeks since President Trump was re-elected that it may be willing
not only to retaliate to tariffs, but also to up the ante.
China has
put export controls on a gradually lengthening list of materials and
technologies. In early December, China halted the export to the United States
of critical minerals like antimony and gallium, which are used in the
manufacture of some semiconductors.
The export
ban was in retaliation for a decision by President Joseph R. Biden Jr. a day
earlier to expand American curbs on the transfer of technology to China.
Beijing’s
response went beyond any previous export restrictions: For the first time,
Beijing officially banned other countries that buy these minerals from
re-exporting them to the United States. China had previously been a critic of
such transshipment bans, describing them as an unfair form of “long-arm”
jurisdiction that interfered with international commerce.
Yet Beijing
is aware, Chinese experts said, that a strong reaction from China poses two big
risks.
Further
restricting exports could prompt multinationals to stop investing in China and
put their new factories in other countries. Another risk is that such curbs on
exports by China could trigger a further response from President Trump.
An upward
spiral in trade restrictions is what happened during the first Trump
administration. China responded to that first round of tariffs in 2018 with its
own penalties on American exports. But as Mr. Trump imposed further rounds of
tariffs, Beijing quickly ran out of American exports to target. China sells
nearly four times more goods to the United States than it buys.
China and
the Trump administration agreed to stop the escalation in January 2020, but
left in place most of the tariffs that had been imposed.
Some Chinese
experts contend that tariffs will hurt American consumers, by pushing up
prices, more than they will hurt China.
“This style
of bluff will backfire,” said Zhang Weiwei, dean of the China Institute at
Fudan University in Shanghai. “From our calculation, over 90 percent of the
increased tariffs were in fact paid by American companies or consumers.”
However,
some Western economists argue that the question of who pays tariffs is not
clear-cut. To avoid big losses of market share in the United States after the
previous imposition of tariffs, some Chinese companies lowered prices. That
would have helped them to offset the tariffs and to dissuade American importers
from turning to suppliers in other countries.
China’s
exports to the entire world rose more than 12 percent last year by volume, but
the increase in dollar terms was only half as much, as companies slashed
prices.
China’s
currency has also weakened in recent months, and prices are falling in China
for many goods. That has made Chinese goods more competitive in foreign
markets, including the United States, and may offset part of the cost of the
tariffs imposed on Saturday.
Professor
Zhang pointed out that exports to the United States represent a declining share
of China’s overall exports, as exports to developing countries have surged.
Still, China
has become indirectly more dependent on the American market. China’s exports
have surged to countries like Mexico and Vietnam that assemble Chinese
components into finished goods for re-export to the United States.
The big
question now for China is how many other countries President Trump will hit
with tariffs.
“China has
learned from Trump’s first term how to manage even large bilateral tariffs on
direct U.S.-China trade — some companies will just pay up to import a critical
part, and Chinese companies will find a way to do final assembly outside of
China while still using a ton of Chinese parts,” said Brad Setser, an
international economist at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. As
long as final assembly is done outside of China, goods have typically been able
to bypass American tariffs on China.
But American
tariffs on many countries would be harder for China to bypass. “China does face
a problem if President Trump is determined to close all of the United States
bilateral trade deficits no matter the collateral damage to the U.S. economy,”
Mr. Setser said.
Many
countries in Asia, Europe and Africa run large trade deficits with China that
they can afford only by running large trade surpluses with the United States.
The European Union had a $247 billion trade deficit with China last year — and
an almost equally large trade surplus with the United States.
If President
Trump curtails the ability of many countries to run large trade surpluses with
the United States, countries might resort to imposing tariffs on trade with
China.
China is
more dependent on trade surpluses than it was during the first Trump
administration. During President Trump’s first term in office, prices were
soaring in China’s housing market amid a manic pace of apartment tower
construction.
But the hot
real estate market began to cool in 2021, and prices have been falling since.
Millions of construction workers have lost their jobs, and middle-class
families have lost their savings.
As renewed
tensions with the United States coincide with economic weakness at home,
officials and experts in China are still hoping for the best.
“We will do
our best to try to stabilize this relationship,” Professor Wu said on Thursday,
“but we also prepare for the worst-case scenario down the road.”
TARIFFS AND
YOU.Do you conduct trade with companies in China? Tell us how the tariffs will
affect your business.
Keith
Bradsher is the Beijing bureau chief for The Times. He previously served as
bureau chief in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Detroit and as a Washington
correspondent. He has lived and reported in mainland China through the
pandemic. More about Keith Bradsher
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