
US and China Reach Breakthrough Trade Deal Lowering Tariffs and Easing Tensions in Historic 90-Day Economic Agreement
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Today, the landscape of U.S.-China tariffs is shifting fast as the Trump administration enacts sweeping trade policies and negotiates new agreements with Beijing. Most recently, the United States and China reached a breakthrough understanding to ease several tariffs, with both countries agreeing to reduce duties and suspend retaliatory measures for a 90-day period. According to a White House fact sheet issued after high-level negotiations in May, both sides have lowered their most recent tariff rates by 115%, while retaining a baseline 10% tariff on imports from each other. China also pledged to lift its non-tariff countermeasures and suspend the retaliatory tariffs it rolled out in early April, setting the stage for smoother trade flows over the summer.
For listeners tracking tariff numbers and timelines, here’s the current breakdown: As of April 5, 2025, a baseline 10% reciprocal tariff has applied to all Chinese goods entering the United States under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. In addition, the Trump administration imposed a targeted 20% tariff on specific Chinese imports linked to fentanyl precursor shipments earlier this year. Certain high-priority sectors, such as electronics and machinery cited under Section 301, face a combined effective tariff of 35%. These rates are designed to counterbalance unfair trade practices and incentivize cooperation on critical issues like intellectual property and illicit substances, as reported by FreightWaves and other outlets.
The latest agreement, formalized in Geneva and London, kicked off on May 14, 2025. For U.S. imports from China, the duty rate dropped to 10% for goods entered after that date, temporarily suspended from a previously announced 34% rate. That suspension is scheduled to last 90 days, taking us to mid-August—unless the administration extends the reprieve or revises the tariff schedule. China, in turn, matched that move by cutting its tariffs on U.S. goods to 10% and removing various non-tariff barriers. The White House has called this mutual reduction a “historic trade win,” vowing to monitor compliance and revisit talks later this summer.
Despite the easing, listeners should note that the White House has reserved the right to restore higher tariffs if China fails to uphold terms related to fentanyl control or intellectual property enforcement. The tariff structure remains complex: all Chinese goods face the 10% baseline, fentanyl-linked goods are hit with a total 30%, and Section 301 goods face 35%.
With headlines closely following the July 9 deadline to finalize the new trade deal, all eyes are on whether Presidents Trump and Xi will sign off on the framework agreement, or if further escalation is on the horizon.
Thanks for tuning in to China Tariff News and Tracker. Be sure to subscribe for our next update, and remember—this has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.
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