China counters with tariffs on US products. It will also investigate
Google
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[February 04, 2025] By
KEN MORITSUGU and HUIZHONG WU
BEIJING (AP) — China countered President Donald Trump's across-the-board
tariffs on Chinese products with tariffs on select U.S. imports Tuesday,
as well as announcing an antitrust investigation into Google and other
trade measures.
U.S. tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico were also set to go into
effect Tuesday before Trump agreed to a 30-day pause as the two
countries acted to appease his concerns about border security and drug
trafficking. Trump planned to talk with Chinese President Xi Jinping in
the next few days.
The Chinese response was “measured,” said John Gong, a professor at the
University of International Business and Economics in Beijing. “I don’t
think they want the trade war escalating," he said. "And they see this
example from Canada and Mexico and probably they are hoping for the same
thing.”
This isn't the first round of tit-for-tat actions between the two
countries. China and the U.S. had engaged in a trade war in 2018 when
Trump raised tariffs on Chinese goods and China responded in kind.
This time, analysts said, China is much better prepared to counter, with
the government announcing a slew of measures that cut across different
sectors of the economy, from energy to individual U.S. companies.

Counter tariffs
China said it would implement a 15% tariff on coal and liquefied natural
gas products as well as a 10% tariff on crude oil, agricultural
machinery and large-engine cars imported from the U.S. The tariffs would
take effect next Monday.
“The U.S.’s unilateral tariff increase seriously violates the rules of
the World Trade Organization," the State Council Tariff Commission said
in a statement. "It is not only unhelpful in solving its own problems,
but also damages normal economic and trade cooperation between China and
the U.S.”
The impact on U.S. exports may be limited. Though the U.S. is the
biggest exporter of liquid natural gas globally, it does not export much
to China. In 2023, the U.S. exported 173,247 million cubic feet of LNG
to China, representing about 2.3% of total natural gas exports,
according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
China imported only about 700,000 cars overall last year, and the
leading importers are from Europe and Japan, said Bill Russo, the
founder of the Automobility Limited consultancy in Shanghai.
Further export controls on critical minerals
China announced export controls on several elements critical to the
production of modern high-tech products.
They include tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum and indium, many
of which are designated as critical minerals by the U.S. Geological
Survey, meaning they are essential to U.S. economic or national security
that have supply chains vulnerable to disruption.

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Women walk by a fashion display of Tommy Hilfiger, which is owned by
PVH Group, at a shopping mall in Beijing, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025. (AP
Photo/Andy Wong)
 The export controls are in addition
to ones China placed in December on key elements such as gallium.
“They have a much more developed export control regime," Philip
Luck, an economist at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies and former State Department official, said at a panel
discussion on Monday.
“We depend on them for a lot of critical minerals: gallium,
germanium, graphite, a host of others,” he said. "So … they could
put some significant harm on our economy.”
US companies also impacted
In addition, China’s State Administration for Market Regulation said
Tuesday it is investigating Google on suspicion of violating
antitrust laws. The announcement did not mention the tariffs but
came just minutes after Trump’s 10% tariffs on China were to take
effect.
It is unclear how the probe will affect Google’s operations. The
company has long faced complaints from Chinese smartphone makers
over its business practices surrounding the Android operating
system, Gong said.
Otherwise, Google has a limited presence in China, and its search
engine is blocked in the country like most other Western platforms.
Google exited the Chinese market in 2010 after refusing to comply
with censorship requests from the Chinese government and following a
series of cyberattacks on the company.
Google did not immediately comment.
The Commerce Ministry also placed two American companies on an
unreliable entities list: PVH Group, which owns Calvin Klein and
Tommy Hilfiger, and Illumina, which is a biotechnology company with
offices in China. The listing could bar them from engaging in
China-related import or export activities and from making new
investments in the country.
Beijing began investigating PVH Group in September last year over
“improper Xinjiang-related behavior” after the company allegedly
boycotted the use of Xinjiang cotton.

The response from China appears calculated and measured, said
Stephen Dover, chief market strategist and head of the Franklin
Templeton Institute. However, the world is braced for further
impact.
“A risk is that this is the beginning of a tit-for-tat trade war,
which could result in lower GDP growth everywhere, higher U.S.
inflation, a stronger dollar and upside pressure on U.S. interest
rates,” Dover said.
___
Wu reported from Bangkok. AP writers Zen Soo in Hong Kong and
Christopher Bodeen in Taipei, Taiwan, contributed to this report.
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