Dissatisfied China weighing its ‘corresponding countermeasures’ to Trump’s 10 per cent tariff

Trump has made some comments suggesting he’s open to a wider deal with China, including a request for Xi to help end Russia’s war in Ukraine

As the leaders of Canada and Mexico rushed to respond after Donald Trump started a new trade war, Chinese President Xi Jinping took a breath before his nation announced any concrete retaliation.

Following through on a threat made after he won the presidency, Trump on Saturday imposed a blanket 10 per cent levy on China, and 25 per cent duties on both Canada and Mexico, over their alleged failure to prevent undocumented migrants and illegal drugs pouring into the US. Within hours, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau unveiled a 25 per cent counter-tariff on $107 billion of U.S. goods, while Mexican leader Claudia Sheinbaum pledged retaliatory levies.

China’s reaction — coming in the middle of a weeklong Lunar New Year holiday — was more muted, as was typical during Trump’s first term. The Commerce Ministry issued a statement expressing strong “dissatisfaction” and vowing “corresponding countermeasures,” without elaborating. It pledged to file a complaint at the World Trade Organization and called on the U.S. to “manage differences on the basis of equality, mutual benefit and mutual respect.”

With Trump’s levies set to take effect just after midnight on Tuesday, Xi has a range of tools to respond beyond reciprocal tariffs. Options include export controls on critical minerals and market access restrictions to some American firms, according to Gary Ng, senior economist at Natixis SA. A series of laws passed since Trump’s first term give China greater sway over domestic business deals in the name of national security.

Even so, the situation is also more complicated for China compared with the first trade war, both at home and abroad.

Unlike before, when China was his top target, Trump has now hit an ally with an even higher tariff — with more likely to come, including against the European Union. That gives China an opportunity to strengthen trade ties with other nations, and may help exporters retain a competitive advantage.

China’s domestic economy is also facing a more precarious situation. Bloomberg Economics estimates Trump’s initial levy could knock out 40 per cent of Chinese goods exports to the US, jeopardizing 0.9 per cent of China’s gross domestic product.

Exports have been doing the heavy lifting to drive growth as Xi’s government fuels manufacturing to offset a decline in the property sector. Even before the tariffs, economists expected more fiscal spending to offset deflationary pressure and ramp up consumer spending — and now it will be even more important for Beijing to step up.

“I think China hasn’t made the final decision to retaliate or not — they did say they would take countermeasures, which I think doesn’t rule out tariffs,” said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

Trade negotiations between China and the U.S. will be a long process. This is just the beginning.

China typically only unleashes countermeasures to foreign trade actions after tariffs become law, keeping open a brief window for closed-door negotiations. Both presidents pledged to keep both sides talking after a call last month, and Trump has made some comments suggesting he’s open to a wider deal with China, including a request for Xi to help end Russia’s war in Ukraine.

One sign of China’s policy reaction could be the strength of its next yuan fixing, Brad Setser, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former U.S. Treasury official during Barack Obama’s presidency, wrote on X. Chinese markets have been closed over the new year holiday, with the country getting back to work on Wednesday.

Yuan milestone

The yuan breached the psychological milestone of 7.3 per dollar for the first time since late 2023 last month, in a sign the government is potentially willing to let the currency devalue to benefit exports, even after the central bank spent months defending it.

Most of the increase from tariffs can be absorbed through exchange rates, Josh Lipsky, senior director of the GeoEconomics Center at the Atlantic Council, wrote in an email. “That’s one reason why Beijing’s rhetoric will be sharp, but its economic retaliation will potentially be more muted,” he said.

Trump’s executive order called on the Communist Party to leverage “the most sophisticated domestic surveillance network” in the world to stop criminal organizations facilitating the flow of illicit drugs. Exactly what that would entail wasn’t specified, giving Xi no obvious path to lifting the tariffs. China has already pledged to crack down on domestic chemical companies to stem the flow of fentanyl into the U.S. and the source material used to make the deadly synthetic opioid.

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With Commerce Secretary pick Howard Lutnick saying days ago that he wants the “highest” possible tariffs on China, Trump is likely just getting started. He floated tariffs on China of around 60 per cent on the campaign trail, and already ordered an investigation into the nation’s compliance with a deal struck during Trump’s first trade war. That is due by April 1, and will likely find Beijing missed its commitment to buy $200 billion of U.S. goods.

That so-called Phase One deal showed how far China could go politically, particularly when it came to U.S. demands to change certain laws. At the same time, those negotiations showed China was careful to avoid hurting itself too much when hitting back.

“Politically, China needed to respond in some way,” Chang Shu and David Qu of Bloomberg Economics wrote in a report on Sunday. “The challenge will be to calibrate its actions to make its point while avoiding setting off an upward spiral of tit-for-tat moves that crush trade at a critical moment for China’s economic recovery.”

— With assistance from Yujing Liu and Lucille Liu.

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