China wants to counteract Trump’s trade war
April 8, 2025
China is about to become badly hit by President Trump’s sharply raised tariffs. As an answer to China’s first response, the American president has envisaged a further substantial rise of import tariffs from China, maybe by as much as another 50 percent.
The current situation can really be regarded as a global trade war with China as the main opponent for the United States. This is nothing new. Indeed, I had quite some articles and comments on this issue in the past (see, for example, from 2019 https://blogg.lnu.se/china-research/?p=2796).
Trump’s rude treatment of China may have different reasons. There be a link to what many observers in the West consider as China’s “unfair trading” by different direct and indirect export subsidies. But it may also be Trump’s objective to change China into a more comfortable competitor country, i.e. for the U.S. Or there may be both explanations.
China tries to find an answer
When studying reactions on Trump’s tariffs in Chinese media, quite some comments deal with desirable normalization of business contacts between the U.S. and China (http://en.people.cn/n3/2025/0407/c90000-20298634.html). Certain pragmatism still seems to exist when it comes to China’s commercial relations to the U.S.
But in my view, China will focus mainly on strengthening domestic demand in order to react on American tariffs and to give more steam to the economy – despite the serious debt situation (see also from 2024: https://blogg.lnu.se/china-research/?p=3606). Still, China obviously plays down the size of its enormous domestic debt – and so seem reactions of global financial markets (which is not really understandable, see my analysis from January 2025 https://blogg.lnu.se/china-research/?p=3615).
Finally, I would like to quote professor Jeffrey Sachs – expert on emerging markets – by using his words that Washington should not aspire to a world in which it alone is prosperous, while everyone else remains poor. Instead, it should strive for a world in which prosperity is widely shared, and all nations can reap the benefits of peace and openness .
All these positive aspects assume liberal and/or free trade conditions.
Hubert Fromlet
Affiliate Professor at the School of Business and Economics, Linnaeus University