😄 🤣 😂 More pathetic than the European threats are those by the Chinese rats - or their attempts to invade Taiwan! (If push came to shove, their navy would be like sitting ducks in a pond -waiting to be blown out of the water. Just look what Ukraine did with the Russian Black Sea fleet. And the Taiwan Strait would become a bath of Rat blood.) China Hits Back at Trump Tariffs with 34% Duties on All US Goods - Bloomberg
Ratland China Hits Back at Trump’s Tariffs With 34% Duties on US Goods
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China retaliated against new US tariffs with a slew of measures, including levies on all American imports and export controls on rare earths, escalating the trade fight with President Donald Trump.
Beijing will impose a 34% tariff on all imports from the US starting April 10, matching the level of Trump’s so-called reciprocal tariffs on Chinese products. Chinese authorities also announced other measures including:
China’s Retaliatory Measures:China’s measures, announced on a holiday, followed Trump’s announcement of reciprocal tariffs on global trade partners, introducing the steepest American duties in a century. The latest US duties will raise levies on nearly all Chinese products to at least 54%, potentially crippling Chinese exports to the US.
Tensions between Washington and Beijing have worsened since Trump returned to the White House in January. The US president has yet to speak with his Chinese counterpart more than two months after his inauguration. Both countries are locked in a stalemate over China’s alleged role in the flow of fentanyl into America, which Trump cited as a reason for the previous two rounds of tariffs.
“The speed in which the counter measures were rolled out shows a high level of deliberation and a suite of appropriate responses to hit back at the US,” said Dylan Loh, assistant professor at the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. “It strikes the balance between inflicting some pain but not being seen as a overreaction.”
European stocks plunged and headed for a correction after China’s announcement. US stock-index futures also extended losses, sending contracts on the S&P 500 down 2.2% at 6:40 a.m. in New York. Treasuries surged further, with the yield on the 10-year plunging 15 basis points to 3.88%. An index of the dollar pared its gains.
In commodities, soybeans fell as much as 2% in Chicago to the lowest since early March. Wheat and corn dropped more than 1%, extending earlier losses.
Before this week’s announcement, the tariff imbalance between the US and China was stark: American duties on Chinese goods towered over the tariffs China charges the US. China’s average tariff on US goods stood at 17.8%, less than the 32.8% the US charged on Chinese goods, according to a Bloomberg Economics analysis.
Last year, China imported almost $164 billion of goods from the US, the lowest amount in four years.
China's Imports From The US Have Dropped in Recent Years
Beijing diversified suppliers after the last trade war and didn't meet purchase promise in 'Phase One' deal with US
Source: China's General Administration of Customs
“The US action does not abide by international trade rules, severely undermines China’s legitimate and lawful rights and interests, and is typical unilateral bullying,” the Finance Ministry said in a statement announcing the 34% tariffs.
The economic conflict between the two governments has extended to private companies in both countries. Chinese officials have pushed back against Walmart Inc.’s efforts to pressure Chinese suppliers to cut prices to offset Trump’s tariffs. Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing drew Beijing’s ire by agreeing to sell his company’s ports in Panama, a move criticized as an attempt to appease Trump.
Trump justified his new tariffs as a fair way to match the barriers that other countries enact on US firms and goods. His administration has also accused China of erecting non-tariff barriers that disadvantage US exports and companies, complaints that were laid out in an annual report published by the USTR this week.
The latest measures reflect China’s message to the Trump administration that both sides are equal, and Beijing will not simply submit or accept the situation, said Wen-Ti Sung, a non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Global China Hub.
Still, China is leaving some “off-ramp,” he said. “China’s retaliation seems still proportional and targeted by design, focusing mainly on agricultural goods and defense contractors, both of which are key Trump coalition constituencies.”
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