BEIJING: China on Friday (May 9) said sales to the United States slumped last month while its total exports topped forecasts, as Beijing fought a gruelling trade war with its superpower rival.
Trade between the world’s two largest economies has nearly skidded to a halt since US President Donald Trump imposed various rounds of levies on China that began as retaliation for Beijing’s alleged role in a devastating fentanyl crisis.
Tariffs on many Chinese products now reach as high as 145 per cent – with cumulative duties on some goods soaring to a staggering 245 per cent.
Beijing has responded with 125 per cent tariffs on imports of US goods, along with other measures targeting American firms.
The Trump administration has since exempted items including smartphones and computers, imported largely from China, from the 145 per cent tariffs.
Beijing has also created a list of US-made products that would be exempted from its 125 per cent tariffs and is quietly notifying companies about the policy, Reuters previously reported.
Against that backdrop, analysts polled by Bloomberg had expected exports to rise just 2 per cent year-on-year last month.
But they beat expectations, coming in at 8.1 per cent.
However, exports to the US – one of China’s top trading partners – fell 17.6 per cent month-on-month, data showed.
Shipments to the US totalled US$33 billion last month, falling from US$40.1 billion in March, according to data published by China’s General Administration of Customs.
“The damage of the US tariffs has not shown up in the trade data in April,” Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, said in a note.
“This may be partly due to transhipment through other countries, and partly because of trade contracts that were signed before the tariffs were announced,” he added.
“I expect trade data will weaken in the next few months gradually.”
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer are set to meet Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng in Switzerland on Saturday and Sunday, marking the first talks between the superpowers since Trump unveiled his tariffs.