Zürcher Nachrichten - China, US slash sweeping tariffs in trade war climbdown

EUR -
AED 4.27626
AFN 82.290251
ALL 98.303168
AMD 448.638164
ANG 2.083865
AOA 1066.604825
ARS 1385.637317
AUD 1.789757
AWG 2.09886
AZN 1.978927
BAM 1.961867
BBD 2.350148
BDT 142.355972
BGN 1.955991
BHD 0.43921
BIF 3466.642319
BMD 1.164416
BND 1.490556
BOB 8.042042
BRL 6.456665
BSD 1.163879
BTN 100.185649
BWP 15.539322
BYN 3.808887
BYR 22822.555101
BZD 2.337889
CAD 1.598778
CDF 3350.024523
CHF 0.937588
CLF 0.028401
CLP 1089.870477
CNY 8.350785
CNH 8.352875
COP 4728.961503
CRC 588.559526
CUC 1.164416
CUP 30.857026
CVE 110.603729
CZK 24.734351
DJF 206.940202
DKK 7.460822
DOP 68.883028
DZD 151.051543
EGP 58.096553
ERN 17.466241
ETB 159.8237
FJD 2.616734
FKP 0.855258
GBP 0.853104
GEL 3.167277
GGP 0.855258
GHS 12.046012
GIP 0.855258
GMD 83.258868
GNF 10082.879271
GTQ 8.95342
GYD 243.495851
HKD 9.140602
HNL 30.407037
HRK 7.536567
HTG 152.652092
HUF 400.753002
IDR 18972.588006
ILS 3.965733
IMP 0.855258
INR 100.124764
IQD 1524.815649
IRR 49021.917103
ISK 142.198525
JEP 0.855258
JMD 186.24037
JOD 0.825547
JPY 169.256611
KES 150.446455
KGS 101.574224
KHR 4665.949074
KMF 494.299056
KPW 1047.931312
KRW 1584.542185
KWD 0.355938
KYD 0.969891
KZT 603.763126
LAK 25086.998761
LBP 104244.744561
LKR 349.269654
LRD 232.773889
LSL 20.695782
LTL 3.438218
LVL 0.704344
LYD 6.303304
MAD 10.600565
MDL 19.832119
MGA 5165.442333
MKD 61.600708
MMK 2444.817629
MNT 4172.747406
MOP 9.410653
MRU 46.228577
MUR 52.840624
MVR 17.937818
MWK 2018.115921
MXN 22.017013
MYR 4.935378
MZN 74.475919
NAD 20.696406
NGN 1805.778374
NIO 42.832464
NOK 11.807028
NPR 160.313409
NZD 1.930608
OMR 0.447717
PAB 1.163879
PEN 4.165883
PGK 4.798696
PHP 66.138253
PKR 331.551792
PLN 4.24963
PYG 9292.738751
QAR 4.245101
RON 5.059407
RSD 117.19504
RUB 91.377207
RWF 1680.609829
SAR 4.367142
SBD 9.719836
SCR 16.508008
SDG 699.228786
SEK 11.06859
SGD 1.489282
SHP 0.915048
SLE 26.141309
SLL 24417.227184
SOS 665.251646
SRD 44.090034
STD 24101.061838
SVC 10.18419
SYP 15139.818681
SZL 20.684904
THB 37.930851
TJS 11.51633
TMT 4.075456
TND 3.427299
TOP 2.727175
TRY 46.271219
TTD 7.916667
TWD 34.296652
TZS 3085.702948
UAH 48.446871
UGX 4181.897033
USD 1.164416
UYU 47.044075
UZS 14498.402008
VES 122.637361
VND 30455.302483
VUV 140.313538
WST 3.214888
XAF 657.923894
XAG 0.032133
XAU 0.00035
XCD 3.146893
XDR 0.818987
XOF 657.972069
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.545872
ZAR 20.674271
ZMK 10481.148816
ZMW 27.292592
ZWL 374.941502
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

China, US slash sweeping tariffs in trade war climbdown
China, US slash sweeping tariffs in trade war climbdown / Photo: STR - AFP

China, US slash sweeping tariffs in trade war climbdown

The United States and China slashed sweeping tariffs on each others' goods for 90 days on Wednesday, after a temporary ceasefire in a brutal trade war that roiled global markets and international supply chains.

Text size:

Washington and Beijing agreed to drastically lower skyhigh tariffs in a deal that emerged from pivotal talks at the weekend in Geneva.

US President Donald Trump said Washington now had the blueprint for a "very, very strong" trade deal with China that would see Beijing's economy "open up" to US businesses, in an interview broadcast Tuesday on Fox News.

"We have the confines of a very, very strong deal with China. But the most exciting part of the deal...that's the opening up of China to US business," he told the US broadcaster while aboard Air Force One on the way to the start of his Gulf tour.

"One of the things I think that could be most exciting for us and also for China, is that we're trying to open up China," he added, without elaborating on details.

Trump had upended international commerce with his sweeping tariffs across economies, with China hit hardest.

Unwilling to budge, Beijing had responded with retaliatory levies that brought tariffs on both sides well over 100 percent.

After billions were wiped off equities and with businesses ailing, negotiations finally got underway at the weekend in Geneva between the world's trade superpowers to find a way out of the impasse.

Under the deal, the United States agreed to lower its tariffs on Chinese goods to 30 percent while China will reduce its own to 10 percent -- down by over 100 percentage points.

The reductions came into effect just after midnight Washington time (0401 GMT) on Wednesday, a major de-escalation in trade tensions that saw US tariffs on Chinese imports soar to up to 145 percent and even as high as 245 percent on some products.

Markets have rallied in the glow of the China-US tariff suspension.

Chinese officials have kept their cards closer to their chests, pitching themselves at a summit in Beijing with Latin American leaders this week as a stable partner and defender of globalisation.

"There are no winners in tariff wars or trade wars," Xi told leaders including Brazil's Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, while his top diplomat Wang Yi swiped at a "major power" that believed "might makes right".

- 'Risk of renewed escalation' -

Deep sources of tension remain, too -- the US additional tariff rate remains higher than China's because it includes a 20 percent levy over Trump's complaints about Chinese exports of chemicals used to make fentanyl.

Washington has long accused Beijing of turning a blind eye to the fentanyl trade, something China denies.

And while the US said it sees room for progress on the issue, Beijing on Tuesday warned Washington to "stop smearing and shifting blame" onto it.

Analysts also warn that the possibility of tariffs coming back into force after 90 days simply piles on more uncertainty.

"Further tariff reductions will be difficult and the risk of renewed escalation persists," Yue Su, Principal Economist at The Economist Intelligence Unit, told AFP.

Trump's rollercoaster tariff row with Beijing has wreaked havoc on US companies that rely on Chinese manufacturing, with a temporary de-escalation only expected to partially calm the storm.

And Beijing officials have admitted that China's economy -- already ailing from a protracted property crisis and sluggish consumer spending -- is likewise being affected by the trade uncertainty.

"Both sides have endured a good deal of economic pain and they can still endure a little bit more," Dylan Loh, an assistant professor at Singapore's Nanyang Technological University, told AFP.

M.Hug--NZN