
China now faces tariffs of 245 per cent on import of goods into the United States as a result of its retaliatory actions, the White House said Tuesday afternoon (India time) as the trade war between the two countries appears to run further and further off road.The announcement came as President Donald Trump authorised an investigation into national security risks posed by the US reliance on imported, processed critical minerals and derived products, which includes cobalt, lithium, and nickel, and rare-earth metals used to manufacture smartphones and batteries (for electric vehicles), as well as military equipment.Trumps order points out the US is dependent on foreign sources...
that are at risk of serious, sustained, and long-term supply chain shocks.
This dependence, the White House said, raises potential for risks to national security, technological growth, and economic prosperity.Until now tit-for-tat tariff exchanges had seen the US levy a 145 per cent tax on Chinese imports and China slap a 125 per cent duty on American goods.
Beijing has also banned the export of certain goods, including those used by aerospace manufacturers and military contractors.On Wednesday morning a top Chinese official claimed the US tariffs were putting pressure on it.However, simultaneously China also said its economy grew a forecast-beating 5.4 per cent in the first quarter.
Industrial output climbed 6.5 per cent and retail sales 4.6 per cent year-on-year.Beijing, though, warned the global economic environment is becoming more complex and severe and that more needs to be done to boost growth and consumption.Trump, meanwhile, has said China needs to make the first step in any negotiation.
The ball is in Chinas court.
China needs to make a deal with us.
We dont have to make a deal with them, the President said, a day after he accused Beijing of reneging on a major Boeing deal.Trump has repeatedly accused China, India, Brazil, and most of the rest of the world, in fact, of levying higher tariffs on American imports than the US places on goods it imports from them.The President has argued, and this was a major issue in his re-election campaign, that levying reciprocal tariffs will either force other countries to bring down their taxes or jumpstart a stuttering American manufacturing sector, offering much-needed local employment.In line with that vision that Trump, since the start of the year, has imposed duties on imports from China, alongside a 10 per cent baseline tariff on many US trading partners.
These began with cumulative 10 per cent tariffs in February and March, and a massive 34 per cent in April.By April 9 the cumulative tariffs had crossed 100 per cent, prompting markets worldwide, including in the US, to nosedive.
Since then Trump has paused several orders, although not those impacting China.China responded in kind and also suspended import of sorghum, poultry, and bonemeal, put trade restrictions on 27 American firms, and filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization.The tariff war has also prompted Beijing to reach out to India and the European Union to drum up support.
Last month Chinas Foreign Minister Wang Yi called on New Delhi and Beijing to make elephant and dragon dance and take the lead in opposing hegemonism and power politics.Source: NDTV--Agencies