Listeners, welcome back to China Tariff News and Tracker. Today is Sunday, May 4th, 2025, and there has been a flurry of new developments in U.S.-China trade relations under President Trump’s administration.
On April 2, President Trump invoked the International Economic Emergency Powers Act to announce sweeping “reciprocal tariffs” aimed at correcting what he called a national emergency created by persistent trade deficits and a lack of reciprocity in international trade. The big headline is the White House’s imposition of a universal 10 percent tariff on goods from all countries, but China faces drastically higher rates. Trump’s executive order established a baseline 10 percent tariff, with specific countries, including China, subject to much steeper tariffs over a series of escalations this spring.
By April 9, the Trump administration had increased tariffs on most imports from China to a whopping 125 percent, responding to what it claims are China’s unfair trade practices and retaliatory measures. According to analysis from Yale’s Budget Lab, this means that, before American consumers and businesses have time to change their supply chains, the effective U.S. average tariff rate has soared to 28 percent, the highest since 1901. This jump reflects the immediate, full brunt of the new China tariffs. However, as U.S. companies shift away from Chinese imports toward other countries, the impact lessens but remains significant, pushing the effective rate to 18 percent—still the most in nearly a century.
China was quick to retaliate. On April 10, China’s State Council Tariff Commission hiked tariffs on U.S. imports to 84 percent and published a white paper calling for cooperation but warning of firm counteraction should restrictions continue. Chinese authorities have also expanded their export control list, targeting U.S. companies with new restrictions on trade and investment.
There are complex exemptions at play. Informational materials, such as books, are not subject to these new tariffs due to protections in the International Economic Emergency Powers Act. Electronics have also been carved out from some tariff rounds after industry lobbying and supply chain concerns.
President Trump argues these reciprocal tariffs correct years of trade imbalances by matching or surpassing foreign tariff rates. However, FactCheck.org notes that the administration’s claims about foreign tariffs may be exaggerated, including figures based not just on tariffs but currency manipulation and non-tariff barriers.
Listeners, U.S.-China trade tensions remain at a high, and both governments appear dug in for a long standoff. The full ripple effects for consumers, manufacturers, and global supply chains are still developing, and we’ll continue to track the fallout from these historic tariff hikes.
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