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World / Asia

China lifts tariffs on US goods to 125% as trade war escalates

Published: 11 Apr 2025 - 05:41 pm | Last Updated: 11 Apr 2025 - 06:06 pm
A man works at a Christmas tree factory for export and domestic markets in Jinhua, China's eastern Zhejiang province on April 11, 2025. (Photo by ADEK BERRY / AFP)

A man works at a Christmas tree factory for export and domestic markets in Jinhua, China's eastern Zhejiang province on April 11, 2025. (Photo by ADEK BERRY / AFP)

AFP

Beijing: China said Friday it would raise its tariffs on US goods to 125 percent in a further escalation of a trade war that threatens to bring exports to a halt between the world's two biggest economies.

Beijing's retaliation sparked fresh market volatility, with stocks seesawing, gold prices surging and US government bonds under pressure.

In a message on social media on Friday morning, US President Donald Trump continued to insist that "we are doing really well on our tariff policy."

"Very exciting for America, and the World!!! It is moving along quickly," he wrote.

But in a sign of investors' worries about the health of the US economy under Trump's erratic stewardship, the dollar fell to a three-year low against the euro.

In Beijing, China's State Council Tariff Commission said new tariffs of 125 percent on US goods would take effect Saturday, almost matching the staggering 145 percent level imposed on Chinese goods coming into America.

A Commerce Ministry spokesperson said the United States bore "full responsibility for this", deriding Trump's tariffs as a "numbers game" that "will become a joke".

The Chinese finance ministry said tariffs would not go any higher because "there is no possibility of market acceptance for US goods exported to China" -- an acknowledgement that almost no imports are possible at the new level.

Economists warn that the disruption in trade between the tightly integrated US and Chinese economies threatens businesses, will increase prices for consumers, and could cause a global recession.

Ipek Ozkardeskaya, an analyst at the Swissquote bank, said the tariff figures were "so high that they don't make sense any more."

"For China though -- it's clear they're now ready to go as far as needed, having given up short-term gains for long-term relief," she told AFP.