China has responded strongly after US president Donald Trump threatened to hit Beijing with an extra 50% tariff if it doesn't withdraw its retaliatory levy on Tuesday.
The new tariffs could leave some US companies bringing in certain goods from China facing a 104% tax.
(aside: I've heard reports that some of the countries, that have approached the White House willing to negotiate, have come away wondering if the White House is really looking for a deal.)
#2 | Posted by LampLighter
My feeling is that Trump wants to tank the stock market to personally profit from shorting it. And to lump in the bogus tariff revenue along with the fake savings from illegally firing millions of middle-class federal workers to ram through massive tax cuts for billionaires by bypassing the senate filibuster with more parliamentary nonsense.
For an example of other weaselly tactics the GOP is currently using, see:
Senate Republicans set to bypass parliamentarian on Trump tax cuts
thehill.com
@#24 ... No, US consumers will not pay the tariffs. ...
Yawn.
Do try to troll better.
What are tariffs, who pays for them and what can they do to the economy?
www.colorado.edu
Who Pays Tariffs? Americans Will Bear the Costs of the Next Trade War
taxfoundation.org
Trump's tariffs are here --" here's who pays for these import taxes and how much prices could rise
www.bankrate.com
What else yer current trolling alias got?
@#30 ... China has been the clear loser. ...
While I agree China is going through tough times, I do not agree that toughness is the result of trade wars.
China's big problems are real estate.
OpEd: China's Economy Is in Deep Trouble (February 2025)
www.newsweek.com
... "China's economy is confronting a crisis unlike any it has experienced since it opened its economy to the world more than four decades ago," the New York Times reported in September.
Why is the crisis so severe? For starters, China is currently having its 2008 downturn.
In 2008, China's President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao decided they would not allow the economy to suffer, so they embarked on perhaps the biggest stimulus program in history.
The result was historic overbuilding, and the country now has too much of almost everything. For instance, He Keng, a former senior statistics official, in 2023 publicly revealed that China had enough vacant apartments to house the entire population of 1.4 billion people. He noted that some believed that empty homes could hold three billion.
To deal with the severe imbalance, some Chinese localities are demolishing newly completed but vacant apartment buildings. Yet this is only a temporary fix. After all, destroyed buildings cannot produce revenue to pay for their construction and demolition. ...
But ... how does that affect the exports the US seems to be so reliant upon?
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