How China Should Handle Trump’s Tariffs
Foreign Policy

U.S. and China flags at the U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade in 2012 (U.S. Department of Agriculture/Flickr).
The following is an excerpt from an op-ed written by Lizzi C. Lee, Fellow on Chinese Economy at ASPI's Center for China Analysis, and published in Foreign Policy.
China fired back at the Trump administration’s tariff hike, raising duties on U.S. goods to 84 percent—a dramatic increase from the previous 34 percent. The move came just hours after the U.S. imposed its own sweeping increases, bringing total tariffs on Chinese imports to over 100 percent, and was followed with a declaration by U.S. President Donald Trump of 125 percent tariffstoday. For Beijing, the political message is unambiguous: The United States is weaponizing trade beyond the realm of economic rationality.
China’s knee-jerk response has been to meet Trump’s threats with resounding resolve and retaliatory tariffs: Official statements and state media editorials insist that the country possesses “sufficient tools” and “full confidence” to respond. But that instinct—while emotionally satisfying—is a strategic misstep.
Read the full article here.