Tariffs on Chinese Goods Drop to 55%, but That's Cold Comfort for Consumers
Triple-digit bilateral tariffs have been brought down to double digits. Negotiations on semiconductors and rare earth elements will continue.

The United States finalized a trade deal with China on Thursday that will see tariffs on Chinese imports fall to 55 percent (from 145 percent) and Chinese duties on American imports drop to 10 percent (from 125 percent). Though a reduction in tariffs is worth celebrating, the retention of American export controls on Chinese-bound semiconductors and China's maintenance of licensing for American-bound rare earth elements suggest that the struggle between the two nations is far from over.
The early-May Geneva Consensus reached by American and Chinese trade representatives in Switzerland broke down after China refused to roll back export restrictions on rare earth elements (REEs)—critical inputs for the production of semiconductors. About 90 percent of those critical inputs are produced in China. The Trump administration responded by announcing export controls on semiconductor design software and jet engines.
Following negotiations in London between Commerce Department Secretary Howard Lutnick and Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao, President Donald Trump announced the reduction of American tariffs on Chinese goods and gave permission for Chinese students to continue studying at American universities. China reciprocated by decreasing its tariff on American exports and by removing export controls on REEs in what Lutnick called "a balanced way."
Trump described the American-Chinese relationship as "excellent," but American export controls on advanced semiconductors remain in place. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent testified on Wednesday in a Senate appropriations subcommittee hearing that "there is no quid pro quo in terms of chips for rare earths." China's ministry of commerce is maintaining its examination and approval process on REEs, approving an unspecified number of licenses for export to the U.S.
The countries' tit-for-tat trade war, which is likely to continue under this agreement, has been raging since October 2022, when the U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security restricted China's "ability to both purchase and manufacture certain high-end chips." Since then, China has responded to American export controls on the high-end semiconductors used to train and run AI models by imposing export controls on the raw materials used to fabricate them, such as antimony, gallium, and germanium.
While 55 percent tariffs on Chinese goods is "better than the worst-case scenario we saw in April…it's still not good for importers in the United States," argues Scott Lincicome, vice president of general economics at the Cato Institute. Meanwhile, businesses and consumers have suffered from input-price volatility and higher prices, respectively. "The liberalization of China's export restrictions on rare earths…only lasts for six months," explains Lincicome. Ryan Young, an economist at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, argues that instead of trying to secure REEs through trade deals that could be easily renegotiated, lawmakers should remove self-imposed regulatory obstacles "like the conflict minerals provision of the Dodd-Frank Act." (That law imposes a range of requirements on American companies sourcing certain minerals from abroad.)
American tariffs on Chinese exports are still more than double what they were before Trump took office, according to data compiled by the Peterson Institute for International Economics. While Chinese tariffs on American exports have been successfully reduced to half of the levels seen under the Biden administration, Americans should expect China to leverage its dominance over rare earth elements to extract concessions from the U.S. in the future.
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OMG you still don't get it. Import taxes and self sufficiency are how nations build wealth. That Adam Smith guy was a dufus. Comparative advantage? Opportunity cost? Hogwash! Industry needs to be protected from foreign competition. Besides, who needs cheap shit anyway. The more you pay for stuff the richer you are.
Reminder. You want to increase income taxes at 2x the cost of even the worst estimates of the tariffs.
Also reminder, every prediction you've made has been wrong.
Final reminder, you're a fucking uneducated retard.
Let me know when the ripples happens.
Cold Comfort for Consumers? OH NOEZ! How will the consumers sleep at night with lower inflation, more income, and lower costs for energy and other consumer products?
It is a truly frightening economy we live in.
“Upheaval” is a word that’s being tossed around.
Should fifty-five percent appear too small
Be thankful I don't take it all
https://x.com/D_A_Irwin/status/1933338687162507650
It's funny because it's true.
It takes a true idiot to go into a negotiation and come out with both sides worse off.
I guess Winnie the Pooh read Art of the Deal. Trump should try reading it too. Maybe he'd do better in future negotiations.
Yep. Everyone is dying from the massive increase in inflation.
2022: BIDENFLATION IS KILLING AMERICA!!!
2025: Higher prices are patriotic!!!
Also 2025> inflation lowest in 4 years.
What higher prices? You mean the lowered CPI and PPI?
Fucking moron.
Maybe you haven't noticed but energy is down 4% and regulations are being removed. Having a far larger effect on prices retard.
Inflation Incoming! Three, Two, One... Wait what?
Oh no your temu trash might be more expensive
Who will sew our tee shirts now?
Mispelled* and trademark infringed* t shirts.
As long as my antifreeze filled toothpaste isn’t more expensive.
Somebody's Chinese overlords are unhappy. Enjoy your stay at the reeducation struggle camp.
Congrats Trump. You just killed whatever American manufacturing depends on rare earths/magnets. The "Art of the Deal" stupidity is stunning. You got played
And American commodity exporters (well over half of all American exports to China) will lose close to 100% of their China market. Farm states will soon realize what Trump did to them.
Yes, aaaaaaaaany day now. Yessiree, that day is almost here, right around the corner - like its been all year long.
Brother, you know rare earths aren't rare. They're crazy common - they're just so chemically similar they're hard to separate out. They're mined in China because China does it cheaper because China can use slave labor.
I know what they are. I repeat. US manufacturing that uses them will soon be mostly dead or moving that part of the assembly to China.
Trump: "I just cured cancer."
Jack: "Do you know how many oncologists you just put out of business!?"
90%? All the more reason to enact stiff tariffs. We should not be dependent upon an unreformed totalitarian Communist dictatorship for vital raw materials. There's no such thing as free trade with unfree nations, and we certainly should never be dependent upon them. Tariffs to avoid strategic dependence upon a potential enemy are perfectly fine. The CPC uses any technology or capital it gets from us to surveill and oppress their people, and to upgrade their military to threaten their neighbors, necessitating their neighbors and the U.S. to increase their military spending to maintain security. That's a hidden cost of "free" trade with dictatorships that tariffs help rectify.