China, Trump and Tariffs
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President Donald Trump on Thursday said he would consider a deal for TikTok where China agrees to approve the sale of the short video app owned by Byte Dance in exchange for relief from U.S. tariffs ...
From Reuters
"If you look at that... China, first row, 67%. That's tariffs charged to the USA, including currency manipulation and trade barriers."
From BBC
China said Thursday it would take all “necessary measures” to protect its legitimate interests after it was hit particularly hard by President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on U.S. trading partners ...
From Yahoo
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In response to Donald Trump’s first term as president, Xi Jinping, China’s leader, initiated a campaign to reduce China’s economic dependence on America. Chinese officials are hoping that a revival in domestic demand,
By Laurie Chen, Michael Martina and David Brunnstrom BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In its first months, U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has moved to deter China from threatening its neighbors,
Donald Trump’s decision to boost tariffs on almost every country will deal a blow to China’s economy. But it’s also handing Xi Jinping a rare opening to deepen relationships across the board, including with key US allies in Asia and beyond.
Morgan Stanley chief China economist Robin Xing wrote that beyond the “direct tariff shock” on China, there would also be an “indirect impact” as the broader US tariff rises slowed global trade, which would hit China as the world’s largest exporter.
President Donald Trump imposed the steepest American tariffs in a century, stepping up his campaign to reshape the global economy and unnerving investors who see a trade war as a risk to US growth.
Stock markets across Asia fell upon opening Thursday morning after President Donald Trump imposed huge tariffs on all the region’s leading economies, including increasing the blanket levy on Chinese exports to the United States from 20 to 54 percent.
The tariffs are part of a new plan announced by President Donald Trump yesterday on what he dubbed "Liberation Day."
3don MSN
As Donald Trump’s April 2 “Liberation Day” for announcing “reciprocal” tariffs on America’s trading partners approaches, the question in Beijing is whether this will be the moment when its nascent trade war with the US really escalates.