US-China trade talks could temper tariff angst, but rivalry runs deep

When representatives from the United States and China meet for talks in Geneva on Saturday, they will take the first step toward normalizing a key economic partnership that has spun out of control since the first Trump administration’s trade war measures in 2018.

Now, in a series of tit-for-tat escalations initiated by President Donald Trump, the world’s two biggest economies have imposed tariffs so high that trade between the two is dwindling.

Despite their tough talk, both sides worry about the economic damage those tariffs could impose. The U.S. needs Chinese goods and resources to keep its economy humming. China needs the U.S. as a customer for the same reason.

Why We Wrote This

To the extent that this trade dispute is a geopolitical rivalry, it’s unlikely the two sides can erase the tension. But they can at least manage it. The current talks are an important avenue.

Are talks a positive development?

Anytime two sides negotiate, it’s a forward step. But it’s important to temper expectations. Both countries have so many trade issues to iron out that a grand bargain looks out of reach, says Scott Kennedy, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

What’s at stake?

Widespread economic damage. If America’s current tariffs stay in place, China’s economic growth rate this year could drop by as much as a third, jeopardizing millions of Chinese jobs. Already, there’s evidence that U.S. tariffs of 145% on Chinese goods are taking a toll. Chinese factory activity fell to nearly a two-year low as factories have lost U.S. orders, production slows, and workers are put on leave. Its year-over-year export cargo volumes dropped 10% during the first 25 days of April. 

For the U.S., the main impact so far has been from anxious investors who sent stock markets tumbling as the trade war escalated, jolting even the staid bond market. Since then, stocks have recovered somewhat as prospects for talks have brightened. But the impact on U.S. consumers will kick in as prices of imported Chinese goods surge and shortages of other Chinese goods emerge.

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