PresidentΒ Donald TrumpΒ has floated talks with his Chinese counterpart more than half a dozen times since the trade war started. But prospects look remote, even as their tariff fight appears to have peaked. Inflicting trade pain is unlikely to bring PresidentΒ Xi JinpingΒ to the negotiating table. Instead, Chinese authorities seem intent on proving that they can withstand more economic and political suffering than their archrival. On Friday, BeijingΒ hikedΒ tariffs on all US goods to 125%, mirroring a move by the White House that pushed duties on Chinese imports to the same level, on top of an existing 20% tax. China said it wonβt match any further hikes, calling the repeated use of steep tariffs economically meaningless, but reiterated its vow to βfight to the endβ with other, unspecified countermeasures. βThe fact that the Chinese authorities have once again matched US tariff hikes suggests that they are in no rush to negotiate with the Trump administration,β saidΒ Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics. ——–
