ICAS Trade ‘n Tech Dispatch (online ISSN 2837-3863, print ISSN 2837-3855) is published about every two weeks throughout the year at 1919 M St NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20036.
The online version of ICAS Trade ‘n Tech Dispatch can be found at chinaus-icas.org/icas-trade-technology-program/tnt-dispatch/.
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Third, in addition to their tiered tariff rate and a zero-tariff commitment on U.S. goods, Trump won several investment pledges (some vague, others performative), LNG purchase promises, and (anti-China) supply chain security commitments from advanced economies. Controversial behind-the-border regulatory issues were left unaddressed for another day. For their part, the South and Southeast Asian emerging economies appear to have been shoehorned into eliminating or reducing their tariffs on U.S. goods and cross-border electronic transmissions as well as into drawing up (anti-China) ‘rules of origin’ in principle to strip out Chinese intermediate goods from their U.S.-bound export baskets.
Fourth, from a functional standpoint, three objectives seem to have been key. First, is trade deficit reduction. More than 50% of the U.S.’ total goods deficit in 2024 was with five Asia-Pacific countries – China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Vietnam. The reciprocal and sectoral tariffs are intended to remedy this deficit – although with rates tiered to peer competitor levels, plus the U.S.’ yawning budget deficit, Trump is likely to be in for a nasty surprise when the deficits for 2025 and 2026 are released. Cue the firing of the trade statistician. Second, is reshoring manufacturing of industrially salient sectors, given that machinery, electrical equipment, motor vehicle and auto parts, and pharmaceutical products accounted for 75% of the U.S. goods deficit in 2025. Sectoral tariffs and investment commitments are to fulfil this objective – although, once again, with rates tiered to peer competitor levels and investment commitments left deliberately vague, success is uncertain. And third, to lock down the security of supply chains in strategic goods (to be read as eliminating Chinese content from these U.S.-centric chains). In this regard, zero-for-zero product tariffs with peer advanced economies and “facilitative rules or origin” with emerging economies is envisaged.
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