Just hours before the two largest economies in the world were about to increase their tariffs on one another, the United States and China extended their trade ceasefire for an additional ninety days.
Beijing said it will prolong its tariff break on Monday, and US President Donald Trump signed an executive order extending the truce until November 10. It indicates that China will maintain a 10% tax on American goods while the US will maintain its 30% charge on Chinese imports.
Beijing retaliated with 125% charges on US imports after Washington threatened to impose tariffs of up to 145% on Chinese goods earlier this year. Following a round of trade negotiations in Geneva in May, the prices for both nations were lowered.
It mentioned that China had the biggest trade imbalance of all of its trading partners in 2024, coming in at around $300 billion (£223 billion). According to the statement, the discussions will also focus on national security and economic concerns, as well as expanding access for US exporters to China. Win-win cooperation between China and the United States is the right path; suppression and containment will lead nowhere,” stated a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington.
China also urged the US to remove its “unreasonable” trade barriers, cooperate for mutually beneficial business ventures, and preserve the stability of semiconductor manufacturing worldwide in the statement.
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