China’s Li condemns ‘mutually destructive tariffs’

December 9, 2025 14:33 | News

China’s Premier Li Qiang says the “mutually destructive consequences of tariffs have become increasingly ​evident” over 2025, in remarks at a “1+10 Dialogue” to the heads of the IMF, World Trade Organization and World Bank.

Without naming US President Donald Trump, China’s second-highest ranking official told the meeting in Beijing ‌on Tuesday that greater effort ​was needed to reform global economic governance due ‍to the trade barriers.

China’s trade surplus topped $US1 trillion ($A1.5) trillion for the first time in November, trade data showed on Monday, which economists say is linked to Trump’s ​tariffs diverting shipments from ‌the world’s second-largest economy to other markets, putting pressure on manufacturing sectors in ​those economies.

“Since the beginning of the year, ‍the threat of tariffs has loomed over the global economy,” Li told the meeting, which ​also includes ​senior officials from ​the OECD and International ​Labour Organization.

Li also said artificial intelligence is becoming central to trade, highlighting models such as China’s DeepSeek as drivers of the global transformation of traditional industries and as catalysts for growth in new sectors, including smart robots ‍and wearable devices.

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.

Latest stories from our writers

Don't pay so you can read it. Pay so everyone can!

Don't pay so you can read it.
Pay so everyone can!

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This