China hits back at Canada with fresh agriculture tariffs

BEIJING, April 21 (Reuters) - China on Monday accused Washington of abusing tariffs and warned countries against striking a broader economic deal with the United States at its expense, ratcheting up its rhetoric in a spiralling trade war between the world's two biggest economies.
Beijing will firmly oppose any party striking a deal at China's expense and "will take countermeasures in a resolute and reciprocal manner," its Commerce Ministry said.

The ministry was responding to a Bloomberg report, citing sources familiar with the matter, that the Trump administration is preparing to pressure nations seeking tariff reductions or exemptions from the U.S. to curb trade with China, including imposing monetary sanctions.
President Donald Trump paused the sweeping tariffs he announced on dozens of countries on April 2 except those on China, singling out the world's second largest economy for the biggest levies.
In a series of moves, Washington has raised tariffs on Chinese imports to 145%, prompting Beijing to slap retaliatory duties of 125% on U.S. goods, effectively erecting trade embargoes against each other. Last week, China signalled that its own across-the-board rates would not rise further.

"The United States has abused tariffs on all trading partners under the banner of so-called 'equivalence', while also forcing all parties to start so-called 'reciprocal tariffs' negotiations with them," the ministry spokesperson said.
China is determined and capable of safeguarding its own rights and interests, and is willing to strengthen solidarity with all parties, the ministry said.
"The fact is, nobody wants to pick a side," said Bo Zhengyuan, partner at China-based policy consultancy Plenum.
"If countries have high reliance on China in terms of investment, industrial infrastructure, technology know-how and consumption, I don't think they'll be buying into U.S. demands. Many Southeast Asian countries belong to this category."
Pursuing a hardline stance, Beijing will this week convene an informal United Nations Security Council meeting to accuse Washington of bullying and "casting a shadow over the global efforts for peace and development" by weaponizing tariffs.

Earlier this month, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said nearly 50 countries have approached him to discuss the steep additional tariffs imposed by Trump.
Several bilateral talks on tariffs have taken place since, with Japan considering raising soybean and rice imports as part of its talks with the U.S. while Indonesia is planning to increase U.S. food and commodities imports and reduce orders from other nations.

CAUGHT IN CROSSFIRE​

Trump's tariff policies have rattled financial markets as investors fear a severe disruption in world trade could tip the global economy into recession.
On Monday, Chinese stocks inched higher, showing little reaction to the commerce ministry comments, though investors have generally remained cautious on Chinese assets due to the rising growth risks.
The Trump administration also has been trying to curb Beijing's progress in developing advanced semiconductor chips which it says could be used for military purposes, and last week imposed port fees on China-built vessels to limit China's dominance in shipbuilding.

AI chip giant Nvidia said last week it would take $5.5 billion in charges due to the administration's curbs on AI chip exports.
China's President Xi Jinping visited three Southeast Asian countries last week in a move to bolster regional ties, calling on trade partners to oppose unilateral bullying.
Beijing has said it is "tearing down walls" and expanding its circle of trading partners amid the trade row.

The stakes are high for Southeast Asian nations caught in the crossfire of the Sino-U.S. tariff war, particularly given the regional ASEAN bloc's huge two-way trade with both China and the United States.
Economic ministers from Thailand and Indonesia are currently in the United States, with Malaysia set to join later this week, all seeking trade negotiations.
Six countries in Southeast Asia were hit with tariffs ranging from 32% to 49%, threatening trade-reliant economies that have benefited from investment from levies imposed on Beijing by Trump in his first term.
ASEAN is China's largest trading partner, with total trade value reaching $234 billion in the first quarter of 2025, China's customs agency said last week.
Trade between ASEAN and the U.S. totalled around $476.8 billion in 2024, according to U.S. figures, making Washington the regional bloc's fourth-largest trading partner.
"There are no winners in trade wars and tariff wars," Xi said in an article published in Vietnamese media, without mentioning the United States.
Reporting by Liz Lee and Laurie Chen in Beijing, Orathai Sriring in Bangkok and Stanley Widianto in Jakarta; Editing by Tom Hogue and Shri Navaratnam
 
What are the options for China here?

USA will eventually coerce a significant amount of countries/unions like EU, middle east, and India to buy more from them via a trade deal and cut China from theor respective markets to a certain extent.
Countries like India, Vietnam, Phillipines etc are likely to benefit because of shifting of few industries away from China in order to escape these tariffs.

A smart move would be to met things cool down and bargain for a better deal.
 

Chinese diplomat invokes Mao Zedong in promise to not ‘back down’ from trade war​

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Chinese diplomat invokes Mao Zedong in promise to not ‘back down’ from trade war​

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China took on US head on from day one of PRC, she can never be intimidated by anyone.
 

Chinese diplomat invokes Mao Zedong in promise to not ‘back down’ from trade war​

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Half a century has passed since Mao's death, but he can still manage to firmly unite the whole Chinese nation tightly together even today.

Chinese social media RedNote
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China channels Mao in trade war with a vow for 'complete victory' over the U.S.

Jennifer Jett
Thu, April 10, 2025 at 6:27 PM GMT+8

The war of words — and trade — between Washington and Beijing took a fresh turn Thursday when a Chinese diplomat declared that her compatriots “don’t back down,” sharing a video of Mao Zedong condemning the United States to underscore her point.

China, the world’s second-biggest economy and one of the U.S.’ biggest trading partners, has matched President Donald Trump tariff for tariff in recent days. Its latest levies on U.S. goods took effect Thursday, totaling 84%.

As other countries scramble to offer Trump concessions in exchange for tariff reductions, China’s more combative approach has drawn the president’s ire. On Wednesday, citing China’s “lack of respect” for global markets, Trump raised U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods to 125%, even as he announced a 90-day pause on higher targeted tariffs on all other U.S. trading partners.

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China responded Thursday that while it does not want to fight a trade war, it also won’t shy away from one.

“We are Chinese. We are not afraid of provocations. We don’t back down,” Mao Ning, spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry, said Thursday in a post on X.

The post also included archival footage of Mao Zedong, who founded the People’s Republic of China, speaking in 1953 when the U.S. and China were on opposite sides of the Korean War.

“As for how long the war should last, I think we shouldn’t decide that,” says the former Chinese leader Mao, who led the country for more than a quarter of a century until his death in 1976.

“In the past, it was decided by Truman. In the future, it will be decided by Eisenhower — or whoever the president of the United States may be. In other words, they can fight for as long as they want — until China’s complete victory,” he continues in the video, which is subtitled in Chinese and English.

In another apparent reference to Trump’s tariffs, the spokesperson also shared an illustration of a “Make America Great Again” hat — which is made in countries such as China, Vietnam and Bangladesh — bearing a “Made in China” label and sitting above a $50 price tag crossed out and replaced with $77.

China vowed reprisals against Taiwan Thursday after a meeting between the U.S. House Speaker and the island's President, saying the U.S. was on a "wrong and dangerous road." (Andy Wong / AP)

Chinese Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning in Beijing on Sunday.

A hashtag about the Mao Zedong post was trending Thursday on Weibo, a popular Chinese social media platform.

“We shouldn’t hold on to any illusion that America will go easy on China,” one user wrote. “Let Trump make the call — however long they want to fight, we’ll fight.”

The Chinese Commerce Ministry did not say whether it would further raise tariffs on U.S. goods in response to Trump’s latest increase. The door to talks “is always open,” a spokesperson said Thursday, “but any dialogue must be based on mutual respect and conducted on equal footing.”

Underlying such comments is China’s history of exploitation by Western nations, memories of which remain searing even as China has leveraged globalization to become the world’s largest trading nation in goods.

Even though U.S. and Chinese tariffs are already at “trade-prohibitive” levels, Trump’s public calls to negotiate are unlikely to work with China, said Rick Waters, a former State Department diplomat who is now the Singapore-based director of Carnegie China.

“The Chinese are proud. They have a history of humiliation at the hands of foreign powers,” he said. “And I think those types of tactics play into their defensive instincts.”

The Foreign Ministry’s office in Hong Kong, a former British colony whose 1997 return to Chinese rule marked the end of what is referred to in China as a “century of humiliation,” said Trump’s actions “won’t make America great again — they’ll only turn the U.S. into a 21st-century barbarian.”

“Those who try to strong-arm the world with tariffs and expect countries to call and admit defeat should never count on getting a call from China,” it said.

Waters said that while he thinks Trump is “sincere in a desire to explore some kind of a deal with the Chinese,” such a deal may be a long way off.

“I think until the two sides feel they have to come to the table, they’re going to let the other stew in their juices,” he said.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

 
What are the options for China here?

USA will eventually coerce a significant amount of countries/unions like EU, middle east, and India to buy more from them via a trade deal and cut China from theor respective markets to a certain extent.
Countries like India, Vietnam, Phillipines etc are likely to benefit because of shifting of few industries away from China in order to escape these tariffs.

A smart move would be to met things cool down and bargain for a better deal.
China will probably be motivated to just not negotiated with the US until the tariffs and the chaos that ensues destroy the American economy and living standards.

Since the Trump administration has decided to push China into a corner, that's probably their only choice as of now.
 

China Vows 'Reciprocal' Action For Anti-China Trade Deals​

By Kevin Pinner · April 21, 2025, 2:58 PM EDT

The Chinese government will take "reciprocal" countermeasures against countries that reach trade agreements with the U.S. aimed at countering China's interests in exchange for securing a reduction in U.S. tariffs.

 
A Chinese guy and a Jewish guy are drinking at the bar...

The Jewish guy turns to the Chinese guy and says, "Fu*k you and your people, for bombing Pearl Harbor!"

The Chinese guy is like, "WTF?! That wasn't us. That was the Japanese!"

The Jewish guy: "Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese... you're all the same."

After a few minutes and another beer, the Chinese guy turns to the Jewish guy and says, "Fu*k you and your people for sinking the Titanic!"

The Jewish guy: "Huh? They ran into an iceberg..."

Chinese guy: "Iceberg, Goldberg, Steinburg, you're all the same."
 
Trump has finally hit the wall.

This tariff thing can't go on.

It's crazy!!!

It's harmful to the USA and the rest of the world.

I predict this will end this year, the peak will be around the end of 90 days tariffs postpone.

Sorry Trump, you are losing this crazy war.
US might not win this trade war but the US won't lose either, because of Dollar dominance and immense market, there are no replacement for US dollar in the next decade, so that's the trump card Trump hold. If US loses, the entire world loses. Imagine US withdraw all US dollar out of existence, there WILL NOT BE ANY TRADE done. Country with US treasury debt can use those to pay off tariff, which is something country like Japan are already doing. But country that hold no US treasury debt will have to eat the tariff or increase the price.

As I said numerous times, the only way China can "Win" this trade war is staying out of it, and make the tariff take its course, that's a smart thing to do, especially whe Trump change his mind very 2 days.
 
US might not win this trade war but the US won't lose either, because of Dollar dominance and immense market, there are no replacement for US dollar in the next decade, so that's the trump card Trump hold. If US loses, the entire world loses. Imagine US withdraw all US dollar out of existence, there WILL NOT BE ANY TRADE done. Country with US treasury debt can use those to pay off tariff, which is something country like Japan are already doing. But country that hold no US treasury debt will have to eat the tariff or increase the price.

As I said numerous times, the only way China can "Win" this trade war is staying out of it, and make the tariff take its course, that's a smart thing to do, especially whe Trump change his mind very 2 days.
Not really. The US actually has the most to lose. If dollar dominance goes down, which will happen because of this, then the US will suffer from hyperinflation and an economic collapse.
 

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