U.S. Seeks Input on $30 Billion of Chinese Goods for Tariff Cuts
Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 26
U.S. Seeks Input on $30 Billion of Chinese Goods for Tariff Cuts
9 articles · Updated · Reuters · May 26
Jamieson Greer said the U.S. will soon issue a public notice seeking comment on which Chinese goods should qualify for lower or eliminated tariffs.
The review follows a U.S.-China agreement to use a joint Board of Trade to identify about $30 billion of non-strategic goods eligible for relief.
Greer said the Trump-Xi summit did not produce broad concessions, arguing Washington kept its China tariffs and expects them to remain higher than those on other countries.
He framed the approach as managed trade rather than systemic reform, citing 200 Boeing jet sales, $17 billion in farm purchases and continued rare-earth supplies as tangible gains.
Amid shifting tariffs and legal chaos, how can American businesses navigate future trade with China?
Is 'managed trade' a path to U.S.-China stability or a permanent cycle of economic conflict?
Beyond farm deals, what unresolved tech and security risks still threaten the U.S.-China relationship?