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“A very good meeting today with China, in Switzerland. Many things discussed, much agreed to. A total reset negotiated in a friendly, but constructive, manner. We want to see, for the good of both China and the U.S., an opening up of China to American business. GREAT PROGRESS MADE!!!” Trump posted on Truth Social.
It was the first comment from Trump after a day of talks in Geneva between US officials, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, and Chinese officials.
A source briefed on the meetings told CNN talks will continue Sunday.
Bessent urged the public earlier this week not to expect a major trade deal out of the meetings, but he acknowledged it was an important step in negotiations.
Vice Premier He Lifeng is leading the talks on the Chinese side, state broadcaster CCTV said in a brief report.
Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua called the Switzerland talks “an important step toward resolving the issue.”
Panic on Wall Street as Trump announces new tariffs
“However, an ultimate solution requires sufficient strategic patience and determination, as well as the just support of the international community,” Xinhua said.
The US has placed a minimum 145 per cent tariff on most Chinese imports, and China has responded with a 125 per cent tariff on most US imports.
As a result, trade between the two sides is falling sharply, according to logistics experts.
Even reducing that tariff rate by half might not be enough to change trade levels significantly. Economists have said 50 per cent is the make-or-break threshold for the return of somewhat normal business between the two countries.
On Friday, hours after Bessent and Greer had set off for Switzerland, Trump floated the possibility of slashing tariffs on Chinese goods to 80 per cent while demanding China “open up its market to USA.”
“80 per cent Tariff on China seems right! Up to Scott B,” Trump said in a Truth Social post.
The combination of fewer goods arriving in the US and increased costs on imports that do arrive has already started pushing up prices for Americans. Goldman Sachs analysts said Thursday that a key measure of inflation would effectively double to 4 per cent by the end of the year because of Trump’s trade war.
And with ships carrying goods under the 145 per cent tariffs now coming into port, a trade deal wouldn’t lower prices immediately.
To say Americans depend on a wide range of Chinese goods understates how pervasive they have become in daily life. Footwear, clothes, appliances, microchips, baby goods, toys, sports equipment, office machine parts and much more all pour into the US from China in staggering numbers.
But now those imports are decreasing. Imports into the United States during the second half of 2025 are expected to fall at least 20 per cent year over year, according to the National Retail Federation. The decline from China will be even starker. Investment bank JPMorgan expects a 75 per cent to 80 per cent drop in imports from there.
The trade war has already affected the US economy. The nation’s gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the US economy, showed America’s first quarterly contraction since early 2022, as importers raced to bring in goods before punishing tariff rates kicked in.
The impact of the sky-high tariffs is also being felt keenly in China, whose exports to the US fell sharply in April. Chinese outbound shipments to the US stood at US$33 billion ($51.3 billion) last month â a whopping 21 per cent decline from the $63 billion recorded in April 2024, according to a CNN calculation.
Steep US tariffs have also taken a heavy toll on China’s manufacturing sector. Chinese factory activity contracted at its fastest pace in 16 months in April, adding urgency to Beijing’s efforts to roll out fresh economic stimulus.
The news that Bessent and Greer would meet their Chinese counterparts in Geneva raised hopes of a detente between the two nations.
The US and China are the world’s largest and second-largest economies, respectively, bigger than even the next 20 economies put together, according to World Bank data.
Trump also told a conservative radio host on Wednesday that he would raise the case of jailed Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai “as part of the negotiation.” Lai, a pugnacious former publisher whose now-shuttered tabloid Apple Daily was a regular thorn in Beijing’s side, is in the midst of a national security trial that could send him to prison for life.
CCTV did not say whether Lai featured in the talks.