Trump tariffs cast shadow as US-China trade shrinks ahead of Xi meeting
Deficit with mainland hits two-decade low as trade shifts to Taiwan, Mexico and Vietnam amid tariff fallout and efforts to stabilise ties

The February international trade data by the US Census Bureau and the US Bureau of Economic Analysis, US federal agencies, showed one of the lowest monthly bilateral goods deficits with China in two decades, even as the overall US trade deficit expanded due to surging imports from alternative partners.
The US goods deficit with China stood at US$13.1 billion in February, continuing a sharp decoupling trend. This is marginally up from January’s revised US$12.7 billion, but remains historically low.
In a press release marking the one-year anniversary of Liberation Day, when US President Donald Trump imposed hefty tariffs on all trading partners, the US Trade Representative’s office highlighted China as a stand-out example of improving bilateral trade balance.
As per the USTR, the goods trade deficit with China declined by 30 per cent in 2025, “creating more balanced trade between the world’s largest economies”. Last year the figure dropped to US$202.1 billion – the lowest level since the early 2000s.