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    The U.S.-China Trade Relationship

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    Introduction

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    U.S. trade with China has grown enormously in recent decades and is crucial for both countries. Today, China is one of the largest export markets for U.S. goods and services (second to Mexico), and the United States is the top export market for China. This trade—much of which grew after China joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001—has brought lower prices to U.S. consumers and higher profits for U.S. corporations. But it also comes with costs, notably the loss of American jobs due to import competition, automation, and multinational companies moving manufacturing overseas.

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    Trade

    United States

    China

    World Trade Organization (WTO)

    China Policy Accelerator

    After the first Trump administration began a trade war with China in 2018, economic tensions between Washington and Beijing have been on the rise. Chinese officials have warned that there are “no winners” in a trade or tariff war, although President Joe Biden continued many of Trump’s policies. In his second term, Trump has escalated tariffs threats as China imposes rare-earths export controls, which created a global supply shortage for the minerals necessary to build most technologies, from semiconductor chips to electric batteries.

     

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