China cites US tariff blow as surplus hits $1 trillion

December 9, 2025 20:24 | News

Higher tariffs have dealt a “severe blow” to the world economy, China’s premier said Tuesday, even as China’s own trade surplus has surged past $US1 trillion ($A1.5 trillion). 

Premier Li Qiang made the remarks at a forum of top international organisations held in Beijing while top Chinese leaders are attending an annual economic planning meeting.

“Starting from the beginning of this year, we’ve seen the stick of tariffs being wielded around the world with growing restrictive measures on the economy and trade, which have dealt a severe blow to the global economy,” Li said on Tuesday, without mentioning US President Donald Trump and his tariff hikes specifically. 

“As the situation has unfolded, the damaging consequences of tariffs hurting both others and oneself have become increasingly evident, and calls from all sides to uphold free trade have grown ever stronger,” Li told the gathering of top representatives from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation. 

Chinese Premier Li Qiang
The damage from tariffs have become increasingly evident, Premier Li Qiang told a Beijing gathering. (AP PHOTO)

Trump’s sharply higher tariffs on imports from China and other countries have dented Chinese exports to the US but that has been offset by higher shipments to other global markets. 

Chinese customs figures reported on Monday showed exports to the United States plunged 29 per cent in November from a year earlier in the eighth straight months of declines. 

China’s trade surplus in dollar terms for 2025 had already exceeded $US1 trillion as of November, while exports rose 5.9 per cent from a year earlier. 

Trade friction between Beijing and Washington has eased somewhat after Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping met in late October during a regional economic summit in South Korea. 

The two sides agreed to dial back earlier steps and extend a truce in retaliatory measures for a year. 

President Donald Trump makes a tariff announcement at the White House
President Donald Trump’s tariffs have resulted in Chinese exports surging into non-US markets. (AP PHOTO)

With investments in technology rising, outpacing overall investments, Li called for “collaborative innovation,” saying “we need to embrace an open mind and work hand in hand to pursue openness and co-operation”.

The Central Economic Work Conference, the annual planning meeting held this week, follows a top level meeting in October to draft China’s plan for 2026-30. 

It focused on China’s aim to remain a global manufacturing power and build a stronger domestic economy that is more reliant on consumer spending and technological advances. 

China’s economy grew at a 4.8 per cent annual pace in the last quarter, the slowest pace in a year. 

However, economists expect growth to hit the official 2025 target of about five per cent, thanks partly to strong exports. 

AAP News

Australian Associated Press is the beating heart of Australian news. AAP is Australia’s only independent national newswire and has been delivering accurate, reliable and fast news content to the media industry, government and corporate sector for 85 years. We keep Australia informed.

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