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US extends tariff exemptions on certain Chinese imports

US extends tariff exemptions on certain Chinese imports

Russia Today2 days ago

The US has extended a tariff pause on certain Chinese imports through August 31. The move comes as negotiations between the globe's two largest economies on the reciprocal tariff hikes from April remain at an impasse.
The extension concerns the 10% tariffs introduced under the investigation into China's policies on technology transfer, intellectual property, and innovation launched during President Donald Trump's first term. Most of the tariffs were retained by Trump's successor, Joe Biden, along with exemptions on a range of products. These exemptions have undergone regular extensions, with the most recent expiring last month.
According to a notice from the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR) dated May 31, the extensions will remain in place for an additional three months. They apply to 164 Chinese goods, including semiconductor components, telecommunications hardware, aerospace items, and medical device parts. The notice also maintains exemptions for 14 categories of Chinese solar panel manufacturing equipment, such as wafer slicers and module laminators, granted in September 2024. No new items were added.
The extension follows a tentative deal reached between the US and China in May following weeks of tit-for-tat tariff hikes. In April, Trump raised duties on Chinese goods to as high as 145%, citing what he called an unfair trade imbalance. Beijing responded with tariffs of up to 125%.
Under the May deal, the countries agreed to suspend most new tariffs for 90 days pending further talks, while maintaining a baseline 10% rate on mutual imports on top of existing US duties.
However, both sides have complained that the talks have since faltered. Washington has claimed that China has not delivered on promises to roll back export controls on key industrial products, such as rare-earth minerals and magnets, which Beijing introduced in response to US tariff hikes. On Friday, Trump accused China of 'totally violating' the May agreement.
Beijing pushed back on Monday, accusing Washington itself of breaching the terms of the deal. China's Ministry of Commerce cited several US measures it claims violate the agreement, including warnings against Chinese telecom giant Huawei, restrictions on chip design software sales to Chinese firms, and the cancelation of student visas for Chinese nationals.

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