Updated
Updated · CGTN · May 23
China, US Agree 2 Trade Councils and Tariff Cuts in Preliminary Economic Deal
Updated
Updated · CGTN · May 23

China, US Agree 2 Trade Councils and Tariff Cuts in Preliminary Economic Deal

5 articles · Updated · CGTN · May 23
  • China and the United States agreed to set up a trade council and an investment council, marking a new institutional framework in preliminary economic and trade outcomes announced after talks.
  • Seven rounds of consultations since May 2025 produced agreements on cutting tariffs on some products, advancing solutions to non-tariff barriers, and improving market access for certain agricultural goods.
  • The package also includes China's procurement of US aircraft and a US commitment to supply aircraft engines and related components, extending the deal beyond tariffs into industrial trade.
  • Officials cast the outcomes as a way to reduce uncertainty created by US tariff measures in 2025, giving businesses in both countries more predictability and shifting ties toward managed competition.
  • With the two economies accounting for about 42% of global output in 2024, steadier China-US trade relations could help stabilize supply chains, trade flows and broader market confidence.
What unstated concessions secured China's multi-billion dollar aircraft and agriculture commitments?
With major security issues unresolved, is this trade deal a true turning point or just a temporary economic truce?
As 'managed competition' begins, can new councils prevent a future clash over technology and intellectual property?

US-China Economic Truce 2026: Fragile Stability, Persistent Rivalry, and the Global Impact of the Preliminary Trade Deal

Overview

In May 2026, the United States and China reached a preliminary economic agreement in Beijing, marking a major shift in their economic relationship. Central to this deal is the creation of a board of trade and a board of investment, which will serve as permanent frameworks for managing commerce and capital flows between the two countries. This move signals a transition from ad-hoc negotiations to structured, ongoing engagement, reflecting a mutual desire to stabilize economic relations, enhance predictability, and provide clearer channels for resolving disputes. These new institutions set the stage for how future US-China economic interactions will be governed.

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