
US President Donald Trump suggested on Wednesday that a trade deal was "possible" with China – a key target in the US leader's tariffs policy.
In 2020, the United States had already agreed to "a great trade deal with China" and a new deal was "possible," Trump told reporters.
One month into his second term in office, Trump has threatened sweeping tariffs on allies and adversaries alike – targeting China as well as neighbors Canada and Mexico, and the European Union – and using levies as his main policy tool for lowering the massive US trade deficit.
At the beginning of February, he slapped additional customs duties of 10 percent on all products imported from China.
He is also threatening to impose 25 percent tariffs on all imported cars, and similar or higher duties on pharmaceuticals and semiconductors as he turns up the heat on some of the biggest US trading partners.
Trump also told journalists aboard Air Force One on Wednesday that his administration was also considering lumber tariffs of "maybe 25 percent" in the coming months.
The president also initially announced tariffs of 25 percent on all Canadian and Mexican imports, before U-turning hours before they were due to come into effect, granting a one-month reprieve in principle until March 1.
And he signed executive orders last week imposing new 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, due to come into effect on March 12.
Exemptions requested
Experts have warned it is often Americans who pay the tariffs on US imports – not the foreign exporter.
Beijing has responded to the US tariffs with customs duties of 15 percent on coal and liquefied natural gas and 10 percent on oil and other goods, such as agricultural machinery and vehicles.
China is the country with the largest trade surplus with the United States in goods – $295.4 billion in 2024, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, which reports to the US Department of Commerce.
US ally Japan last week said it had asked the United States to be exempt from Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminum exports, and has underlined the importance of its auto industry.
Tokyo's trade minister is arranging a visit to the United States in the coming weeks to further push for exemptions, Japanese media reported Thursday.
Yoji Muto was expected to meet US officials including new commerce secretary Howard Lutnick before March 12, when the 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports were set to come into effect, Kyodo News said.
Trump's latest remarks on tariffs came as the European Union's trade chief vowed Wednesday that the bloc would respond "firmly and swiftly" to protect its interests if Washington imposes tariffs on EU goods.
Maros Sefcovic rejected Trump's claim that US-EU trade ties were unfair, calling them the "very definition of a win-win partnership."
But he signaled the EU's willingness for dealmaking, such as the possibility of reducing or eliminating tariffs on autos and other products.
"If we are going to talk about lowering the tariffs, even eliminating the tariffs, let's say for industrial products, this would be something which we are ready to discuss," he said.
Within the 27-nation EU, Germany has by far the largest trade surplus with the United States, largely thanks to its automobile industry and chemical giants such as Bayer and BASF, according to the European statistics agency, Eurostat.
With AFP
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