In an 1898 French cartoon, the figures of Queen Victoria, Kaiser Wilhelm, Czar Nicholas, France's La Marianne and a Japanese samurai enact imperial designs on China. Image: Bibliothèque nationale de France.

Donald Trump has partially walked back on his so-called “liberation day” tariffs on nearly all US imports after fears mounted that the move would result in a global recession and much higher borrowing costs for the US government. On Wednesday, April 9, a mere 13 hours after his higher rate of “reciprocal tariffs” had come into effect, Trump announced they would be paused for 90 days.

“I thought that people were jumping a little bit out of line, they were getting yippy, you know … a little bit afraid,” Trump said to reporters outside the White House. Markets soared immediately upon hearing the news.

But at the same time, a volatile new stage in America’s trade war with China has emerged. The White House has excluded China from the pause and has hiked tariffs on all Chinese imports to 125%. This, Trump says, is because Beijing has shown “disrespect” to Washington and global markets.

Beijing, which has declared it will “fight to the end if the US side is bent on going down the wrong path”, was quick to respond. It has announced duties of 84% on American products and services, and has even floated the possibility of banning the import of Hollywood films.

What China’s response has shown is that it is no longer the same country as it was in 2017, when Trump managed to obtain some trade concessions from it by imposing tariffs. Beijing seems more willing to strike back at Washington, as well as showing signs of being more proactive in its response to American measures.

The impact of China’s response has not yet been fully realized, but tariffs have already raised the specter of increased prices in the US. Many of the clothing and consumer electronics that Americans buy are shipped from China. It’s possible that far from boosting Trump’s popularity, these tariffs may eventually end up reversing it.

At a fundraising dinner in Washington, less than a day before he shelved plans to hike tariffs on US trading partners, Trump insisted: “I know what the hell I’m doing.” But his subsequent loss of face in pausing tariffs for other countries may mean he has no option but to double down on a tit-for-tat trade war with China.

China is his administration’s go-to villain, and any delay or reversal in responding to Chinese retaliation will be a humiliation to Trump’s strongman image. This suggests a tumultuous period ahead for relations between China and the US.

Expect more hostility

The tariffs will probably have a mobilizing effect on the Chinese population. A 2022 survey on public opinion in China found that people born after 1990 are more likely than previous generations to hold an unfavorable view of the US. The survey concluded that Trump’s actions during his first term were much more to blame than propaganda.

Beijing has also traditionally invoked the history of the “unequal treaties” forced upon its ailing Qing dynasty in the late 19th century as a means to mobilise its population against western policies. This has been aided by how the economic demands made by Trump to China are, in the mind of the Chinese leadership, reminiscent of the demands made by the western powers of that period.

Fears of again falling prey to foreign powers play a significant role in Beijing’s policies, encapsulated by what is known as China’s “never again mentality.” This mentality could be used as a means to unify the Chinese population against an outside enemy in a way similar to how many US politicians have attempted to cast China as a foe.

Beijing appears to be banking on the Chinese population’s supposed ability to withstand greater hardships than Western consumers as being able to give it a key advantage over Washington. However, with China’s prosperity being a comparatively recent development, this ability will be put to the test.

Trump’s tariffs against traditional American allies will also play into Beijing’s hands on the international stage. Tokyo has discussed reducing its holdings of American treasuries, while simultaneously bolstering trade ties with China. These moves would have been unthinkable even a year ago – Japan has long been a key US ally and a regional rival of China.

Equally unthinkable is the possibility that the EU will follow a similar path. Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sanchez, has called on Brussels to review its relationship with China. Moves aimed at sidelining China may end up isolating the US instead.

And, perhaps most concerningly, the tariffs may also undermine America’s ability to prevent a Chinese invasion of Taiwan. One of the key factors deterring an invasion was the threat of a 100% tariff on Chinese goods. With Trump’s tariffs on China already exceeding this, Beijing has less incentive to not go after Taipei.

What liberation day has shown us is that the Chinese-American relationship has entered a stage of protracted competition, a phase that Beijing has been preparing for over the past decade. Faced with a choice between humiliation on the international stage or economic disaster at home, it would appear neither side is willing to back down.

Tom Harper is a lecturer in international relations at the University of East London.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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18 Comments

  1. I’m Canadian and at first when tRump stabbed us in the back I was angry. I have now become grateful. We are going to go thru a rough patch but, will no longer be enmeshed as much with the US. I was always against the free trade agreement with them and now hope we don’t do that again. I have always hoped Canada would have closer ties with Europe and I hope we also diversify our trade and leave the US behind.

  2. Its quite funny how the US tries so hard, like Israel, to always play the poor little victim. They think the world owes them a living, while they live on the back of others.

  3. Everything since 1991 done by the US has been delusional. After 2001 with the Zionist takeover, it became insane. After 2016, it became end game. Team Trumpanzee is taking guidance from astrologers and the 1860s to get through the 2020s.

  4. {“never again mentality.”}

    “never again mentality” indeed! But the whities can never understand that, even without “the century of humiliation”, China today still will not bend to the white powers because China is no long “a mere geographical term”.

    1. Meanwhile the population has peaked and Winnie Xi Pooh only has 10 more years before China implodes.

      1. Russia was supposed to implode in March 2022. You need to change your songbook. Its getting a little rusty

        1. I didn’t say that. But I do think the regime in Iran will collapse this year.
          Russia is finished though, just like Syria it will happen suddenly and rapidly. Seems like the Alawites are not looking to Israel for protection, as Iran failed them. Funny that.

  5. China needs to support Trump. Protect him even. He’s doing to or for amerika what China can never hope to do. Make China great again by making amerika weak again.
    And that is why western women keep coming to China. Many factory jobs.

    1. While you wait for these W women you continue to grow hair on your palms and your eyesight gets worse, forcing you to squint more. Leftover Man

  6. Countries using their darkest moments in history as political tool is not new nor is it wrong. That’s why we have independence days, to remind our people of the danger of foreign imperialism.

    1. You must have a lot of independence days, after all your 3k yrs history is full of coolies and conquerors.

  7. Nationalism is a powerful weapon, and the current Chinese leadership is very clever in turning this Trump folly into a reminder of what the West has done to it in the past 250 odd years. We in Hongkong certainly can remember how our city was seized by the British after they used force to export opium to China.

    1. It wasn’t just opium, it was the larger sausages the Chinese ladies liked. Just like in Nanking – more virile men.

  8. Today, China ALONE is more powerful ( economically, technologically, & militarily) than the West & Japan combined, China has being planning for this for DECADES. The West + Japan WILL be HUMILIATED and will NEVER recover, forever.

    1. All happened under those big ginormous western noses.
      Only Trump woke up. Trump: WTF just happened? Where’s our manufacturing? Where’s our gold?
      Meanwhile pretty western women moving to China for real men with real weapons. No fake f47 weiner