🇨🇳

China

⚡ Actively retaliating against US tariffs

China remains America's most consequential and contentious trade partner. The bilateral relationship has undergone a seismic transformation since 2018, when the Trump administration launched Section 301 tariffs targeting Chinese goods over intellectual property theft and forced technology transfer. Initial tariffs of 25% on $250 billion in goods expanded dramatically in 2025, when IEEPA emergency tariffs escalated to a peak of 145% before the Geneva Agreement reset rates to 30%.

💡
China is actively retaliating against US tariffs, putting $143.5B in American exports at risk. With a 30% tariff rate (up from 19.3%), American consumers and businesses are paying billions more for Electronics from China.

Current Tariff

📊

30%

Was 19.3%

US Imports

📥

$427.2B

2024 total

US Exports

📤

$143.5B

2024 total

Trade Balance

⚖️

$-283.7B

US deficit

Trade Flow (2024)

Tariff Rate Change

📈 5-Year Import Trend

📋 Trade Relationship Analysis

China remains America's most consequential and contentious trade partner. The bilateral relationship has undergone a seismic transformation since 2018, when the Trump administration launched Section 301 tariffs targeting Chinese goods over intellectual property theft and forced technology transfer. Initial tariffs of 25% on $250 billion in goods expanded dramatically in 2025, when IEEPA emergency tariffs escalated to a peak of 145% before the Geneva Agreement reset rates to 30%.

The $283.7 billion trade deficit — the largest with any nation — reflects decades of offshoring American manufacturing to China. Electronics alone account for over $150 billion in annual imports, from iPhones assembled in Shenzhen to networking equipment from Huawei competitors. The tariff escalation has accelerated supply chain diversification to Vietnam, India, and Mexico, but China's manufacturing ecosystem remains irreplaceable for many product categories.

China's retaliation has been swift and strategic, targeting American agriculture — soybeans, pork, and corn — hitting rural states that were key political constituencies. Beijing also restricted rare earth exports critical for defense and EV manufacturing, and placed export controls on gallium and germanium.

The outlook remains deeply uncertain. While the Geneva Agreement provided temporary relief, structural tensions over semiconductors, AI, and Taiwan continue to escalate. The decoupling of the world's two largest economies is the defining trade story of the decade, with implications for global inflation, supply chains, and geopolitical alignment.

Tariff Impact

Pre-2025

19.3%

Current

30%

Increase

+10.7%

🏷️ Top Imported Products

ProductTariff RateImport ValuePrice Impact
Smartphones & Electronics30%$78.5B+$180-240 per iPhone
Computers & Laptops30%$42.1B+$150-300 per laptop
Industrial Machinery30%$38.7B+12-18% equipment costs
Furniture & Furnishings30%$25.3B+$200-800 per set
Toys & Games30%$18.9B+$5-25 per toy
Clothing & Apparel30%$16.2B+$8-15 per garment
Auto Parts30%$14.8B+$400-1200 per vehicle
Lithium-Ion Batteries55%$12.4B+$2000-4000 per EV

📅 Tariff Timeline

2018Section 301 tariffs begin — 25% on $50B in goods25%
2019Tariffs expand to $250B in goods; additional 15% on $120B25%
2020Phase One trade deal signed; some tariffs reduced19.3%
2024Section 301 review raises rates on EVs to 100%, chips to 50%25%
2025IEEPA tariffs escalate to 145% over fentanyl and trade deficit145%
2025Geneva Agreement resets IEEPA rate to 30%, Section 301 remains stacked30%

🎯 Retaliation — US Products Targeted

⚡ Active Retaliation
US Product TargetedUS Exports at RiskEstimated Loss
Soybeans$12.8B$8.2B
Pork & Pork Products$1.6B$1.1B
LNG & Energy$3.4B$2.1B
Commercial Aircraft (Boeing)$8.2B$4.5B
Automobiles$6.1B$3.8B
Rare Earth Export ControlsN/AStrategic leverage

💡 Did You Know?

  • China manufactures over 80% of the world's toys, meaning tariffs directly hit holiday shopping budgets
  • The US-China trade deficit peaked at $382B in 2022 before tariffs began reducing import volumes
  • Apple's iPhone supply chain spans 43 countries but final assembly is 95% concentrated in China
  • China holds approximately $775 billion in US Treasury securities, giving it financial leverage in trade disputes
  • The 145% peak tariff rate in April 2025 was the highest US tariff on any country since the Smoot-Hawley Act of 1930

Key Product Categories

ElectronicsMachineryFurnitureToysClothing