US-China Trade War

Battles lines drawn between the world's two largest economies
+ FOLLOW
Register and follow to be notified the next time content from US-China Trade War is published.

Background and explainers on the trade war between China, led by President Xi Jinping, and the United States, and its President Donald Trump. Having started in July 2018, the prolonged conflict reached a turning point in January 2020 with the signing of the phase one trade deal, but not after it had weighed heavily on the global economy for 18 months due to additional import tariffs levied by both China and the US. The US has accused China of unfair trading practices, including intellectual property theft, forced technology transfer, lack of market access for American companies in China and creating an unlevel playing field through state subsidies of Chinese companies. China, meanwhile, believes the US is trying to restrict its rise as a global economic power.

Latest News
News
Opinion
The event also underlined the importance of mainland consumers as growth drivers for the world economy.
What has become evident is that the US needs other countries to agree to its plans and help enforce them, while China is strong enough to act on its own.
1
Developing nations are being urged to boost domestic demand and mutual trade to drive growth, but key factors like population ageing must also be addressed.
2
Years before Washington would target Beijing’s tech industry, the Chinese leader unleashed the country’s scientific potential.
SCMP ColumnistAlex Lo
10
Although asset prices performed strongly this year and there has been no recession, Trump’s second term is a Rubicon-crossing moment for the US and global economy.
1
More than an exhibition, the expo is a statement of intent in a rapidly changing global landscape.
The US-China deal will bring some relief to US inflationary pressure, strengthening the American president’s case for the Fed to further ease rates.
In the face of China’s rare earth export controls, the US is desperate for alternatives to keep its advanced weapons systems modern and mobile.
SCMP ColumnistAlex Lo
8
With the US president finalising a trip to Beijing in April, it is hoped that both sides have the political will to keep relations stable.
2
Moving away from redeveloping the centre is likely wise, but with the scheduled commissioning so close, the timing is open to question.
China’s export control regime on rare earths isn’t retaliation for recent US restrictions – it’s a response to overall US policy.
10
Receiving foreign leaders would be a powerful way for Hong Kong to showcase what it has to offer as one truly unique Chinese city under two systems.
LOADING
Unfollowed
View all