U.S. and
China Will Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks
Top
officials are scheduled to conclude their weekend of trade negotiations in
Geneva on Sunday.
Alan
Rappeport
By Alan
Rappeport
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/11/business/us-china-tariffs.html
May 11, 2025
Updated 1:00
a.m. ET
Top economic
officials from the United States and China will meet on Sunday in Geneva for
their second day of high-stakes negotiations, discussions that are aimed at
easing tensions stemming from President Trump’s trade war.
The talks
have major implications for the global economy, which has been rocked by the
tariffs that the United States and China have imposed on each other in recent
months. Mr. Trump has imposed a minimum tariff of 145 percent on all Chinese
imports, while China has hit American products with a 125 percent import tax.
Such
punitive levies are already disrupting the world’s supply chains. American
companies are scrambling to source products from countries other than China,
while Chinese factories are looking for ways around the U.S. tariffs and
exporting more to Southeast Asia. At the same time, many U.S. businesses are
weighing how much they can increase prices to help offset the tariff costs.
Economists
have warned that the trade dispute will slow global growth and fuel inflation,
potentially tipping the United States into a recession. Those economic fears
have pressured Mr. Trump into seeking a deal with China.
After
roughly seven hours of talks on Saturday, the United States said it would not
release any formal statement about the proceedings.
Mr. Trump
hailed the initial conversations as a success.
“A very good
meeting today with China, in Switzerland,” Mr. Trump wrote on Truth Social.
“Many things discussed, much agreed to. A total reset negotiated in a friendly,
but constructive, manner.”
Treasury
Secretary Scott Bessent and Jamieson Greer, the United States Trade
Representative, are leading the talks for Washington. For Beijing, the
negotiations are being led by He Lifeng, China’s vice premier for economic
policy.
The tariffs
effectively cut off trade between the world’s two largest economies.
Ahead of the
meetings, Mr. Trump suggested that he would be open to lowering the tariffs to
80 percent from 145 percent. However, the White House spokeswoman, Karoline
Leavitt, said that China would have to make concessions for the tariffs to be
reduced.
The Trump
administration has accused China of unfairly subsidizing key sectors of its
economy and flooding the world with cheap goods. The United States has also
been pressuring China to take more aggressive steps to curb exports of
precursors for fentanyl, a drug that has killed tens of thousands of Americans.
China has
been steadfast in saying it does not intend to make trade concessions in
response to Mr. Trump’s tariffs. Officials have insisted that the nation agreed
to engage in talks at the request of the United States.
The trade
talks this weekend were intended to set the stage for broader economic
negotiations between the two countries. Economists have been skeptical that a
quick deal is likely.
“We think
the takeaway is to lower expectations for what might emerge from talks between
U.S. and Chinese officials this weekend,” Nancy Vanden Houten, U.S. economist
at Oxford Economics, wrote in a research note on Saturday.
Ms. Vanden
Houten explained that even if the United States reduces the tariff rate on
Chinese imports to 80 percent, the overall effective tariff rate for imports
would be three times higher than projections from when Mr. Trump was elected.
But Mr.
Trump appears poised to tout any concessions made by China as win for the
United States.
Reiterating
his call for China to open up its markets to American companies on Saturday,
Mr. Trump declared: “GREAT PROGRESS MADE!!!”
Amy Chang
Chien contributed reporting from Taipei, Taiwan.
Alan
Rappeport is an economic policy reporter for The Times, based in Washington. He
covers the Treasury Department and writes about taxes, trade and fiscal
matters.
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