
26 December 2025
US China Trade War Escalates: Tariffs Soar to 17% as Trump Imposes Massive Duties Reshaping Global Economic Landscape
China Tariff News and Tracker
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Welcome to China Tariff News and Tracker, where we break down the latest twists in the US-China trade showdown under President Trump.
Listeners, as 2025 wraps up, the US average tariff rate has skyrocketed to nearly 17% from under 3% at the end of 2024, according to Yale Budget Lab, raking in $30 billion monthly for the Treasury. But China remains ground zero. Wikipedia's detailed timeline shows the rollercoaster: Trump invoked emergency powers on April 2, dubbing it Liberation Day, slapping a baseline 10% on nearly all imports, then hiking China's to 145% by mid-April amid retaliatory spirals—China matched at 125%. Sector hits were brutal; Fibre2Fashion reports US textile tariffs on China jumped from 4.4% to 38.4%, an 873% surge, while some apparel faced up to 129%, pricing Chinese exporters out and shifting supply chains to Vietnam and Bangladesh.
Pauses and deals followed market chaos—the S&P 500's wild swings, including a record Nasdaq plunge. By May 12, a 90-day truce cut US rates to 30% and China's to 10%. October brought fresh fire: Trump announced a 100% hike on November 1 over rare earth export controls—China dominates 70% of global supply. But Xi-Trump talks in South Korea on October 30 eased fentanyl-related tariffs from 20% to 10%, dropping the overall China rate from 57% to 47%, per Fibre2Fashion. China pledged soybean buys and rare earth access.
Finance-Commerce highlights uncertainties ahead: China's trade surplus topped $1 trillion despite tariffs, thanks to diversification and mineral leverage. A shaky US-China detente expires mid-2026, with Trump-Xi summits eyed. Notably, semiconductor tariffs are delayed to 2027—zero rate for now, but a 50% duty on some chips persists from January, says Coinpaper.
Times Union notes Trump's overhaul hit China hardest, reshaping decades of policy. Retail CEOs warned of price hikes; apparel costs rose 14%. Goldman Sachs estimates full tariffs could shave 2% off China's GDP.
Stay tuned as 2026 tests these fragile truces.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe now for every update. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, as 2025 wraps up, the US average tariff rate has skyrocketed to nearly 17% from under 3% at the end of 2024, according to Yale Budget Lab, raking in $30 billion monthly for the Treasury. But China remains ground zero. Wikipedia's detailed timeline shows the rollercoaster: Trump invoked emergency powers on April 2, dubbing it Liberation Day, slapping a baseline 10% on nearly all imports, then hiking China's to 145% by mid-April amid retaliatory spirals—China matched at 125%. Sector hits were brutal; Fibre2Fashion reports US textile tariffs on China jumped from 4.4% to 38.4%, an 873% surge, while some apparel faced up to 129%, pricing Chinese exporters out and shifting supply chains to Vietnam and Bangladesh.
Pauses and deals followed market chaos—the S&P 500's wild swings, including a record Nasdaq plunge. By May 12, a 90-day truce cut US rates to 30% and China's to 10%. October brought fresh fire: Trump announced a 100% hike on November 1 over rare earth export controls—China dominates 70% of global supply. But Xi-Trump talks in South Korea on October 30 eased fentanyl-related tariffs from 20% to 10%, dropping the overall China rate from 57% to 47%, per Fibre2Fashion. China pledged soybean buys and rare earth access.
Finance-Commerce highlights uncertainties ahead: China's trade surplus topped $1 trillion despite tariffs, thanks to diversification and mineral leverage. A shaky US-China detente expires mid-2026, with Trump-Xi summits eyed. Notably, semiconductor tariffs are delayed to 2027—zero rate for now, but a 50% duty on some chips persists from January, says Coinpaper.
Times Union notes Trump's overhaul hit China hardest, reshaping decades of policy. Retail CEOs warned of price hikes; apparel costs rose 14%. Goldman Sachs estimates full tariffs could shave 2% off China's GDP.
Stay tuned as 2026 tests these fragile truces.
Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe now for every update. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more check out https://www.quietperiodplease.com/
Avoid ths tariff fee's and check out these deals https://amzn.to/4iaM94Q
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI