Six lessons from the US-China trade war as the next phase looms
With further tariff increases on US imports from China effective from August 1st, 2024 and potentially more to come after November’s US presidential election, we take this opportunity to examine the implications and outlook of the US-China trade war.
What you will learn:
- US tariffs have cut imports from China by 35%-40% relative to plausible counterfactual paths, and the impact has risen over time. We estimate a 1ppt rise in US tariffs cuts imports from China by 2.5% in the long term, meaning the high tariffs now being discussed in the US would be prohibitive.
- Suppliers in NAFTA and other Asian economies have stepped into the gaps left by China. This may encourage additional US protectionism versus China. Evidence of some Chinese goods being re-routed into the US to evade tariffs, meanwhile, may see third countries being targeted as well.
- US tariffs have not shrunk its overall trade deficit even if the deficit with China has shrunk. Trade conflict has cut US GDP by an estimated 0.2%-0.4% and raised prices by 0.1%-0.3%.

*Europe 4: Germany, France, UK, and Italy
Tags:
Related Resources

Post
How much could trade policy uncertainty hurt the outlook?
If there’s one thing more damaging than tariffs themselves, it’s the sharp rise in trade policy uncertainty.
Find Out More
Post
Tariff whiplash starting to cause US supply-chain stress
Tariff threats and heightened trade policy uncertainty began causing stress in supply chains.
Find Out More
Post
US PCE nowcast shows no slowdown in price pressures
Despite weaker-than-expected gains in headline consumer and producer prices in February, the source data that feed into the PCE deflator show few signs of a slowdown, something that won't sit well with the Federal Reserve as the boost from tariffs is still to come.
Find Out More