Trump signals he is open to cutting China tariffs to 80% ahead of trade negotiations
President Donald Trump has signaled a willingness to drastically cut the U.S. current 145% tariff rate on China ahead of trade talks between the two countries.
Trump wrote in a Truth Social post Friday morning: “80% Tariff on China seems right! Up to Scott B.,” appearing to refer to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
The post comes a day before Bessent and U.S. Trade Rep. Jamieson Greer meet with their Chinese counterparts in Geneva, Switzerland, for trade discussions.
Trump indicated yesterday that he might be open to lowering the current 145% tariff on China. “ I mean, we’re going to see. Right now, you can’t get any higher,” he said during remarks from the Oval Office.
A representative for the Chinese embassy in the U.S. did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
An 80% across-the-board tariff would still be far beyond the duties the U.S. had in place on China before Trump took office. He first imposed a 20% levy on America’s third-largest source of imports in response to its alleged inaction on curbing fentanyl flows, then signed an executive order several weeks later imposing 125% duties on it.
In general, Trump’s unwieldy approach to tariffs negotiations has continued unabated: On Thursday, he announced an agreement was being worked out with the UK that contained few details but which would leave the U.S.’s 10% across-the-board duty on all countries mostly in tact. Yet while the agreement signaled pathways to expand U.S. exports of beef, ethanol, and other agricultural products, it provided no guarantees, as yet, that the U.K. would actually increase imports of those products.