Saturday, October 11, 2025

Trump proposes 80% China tariff ahead of trade talks

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US President Donald Trump has proposed cutting tariffs on goods from China, in his latest comment to signal interest in de-escalating the trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.

“Eighty per cent Tariff on China seems right,” Trump wrote on social media on Friday, ahead of trade talks between the two countries in Switzerland.

China’s Vice Foreign Minister Hua Chunying also struck a confident note ahead of the meetings, saying Beijing had “full confidence” in its ability to manage trade issues with the US.

Since April, Trump has hit items from China with import taxes of 145 per cent, sending shockwaves through financial markets and driving down trade between the two countries.

On Friday, official figures for April showed China’s exports to the US fell by more than 20 per cent compared to a year earlier. But at the same time its total exports rose by a better-than-expected 8.1 per cent.

Officials in both Washington and Beijing are “under growing economic pressure”, Dan Wang from political risk consultancy Eurasia Group told the BBC.

“The recent signals from both sides suggest a transactional de-escalation is on the table”, she added.

The announcement earlier this week of the talks was welcomed as an important first step towards easing tensions but analysts have warned that this marks the start of what are likely to be lengthy negotiations.

“The systemic frictions between the US and China will not be resolved any time soon,” said former US trade negotiator, Stephen Olson.

Any cuts to tariffs as a result of this meeting are likely to be “minor”, he added.

The initial negotiations will be led by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and China’s Vice Premier and economic tsar He Lifeng.

But “I think everyone recognises that any final deal will require the active engagement of both presidents,” Mr Olson said.

Another trade expert said that even if the new tariffs imposed by Trump were lifted, the two countries would still have major issues to overcome.

“A realistic goal is probably at best a pullback from the sky-high bilateral tariffs but that would still leave in place high tariff barriers and various other restrictions”, the former head of the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) China division, Eswar Prasad told BBC News. (BBC)

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