Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 28
China Imposes 55% Tariff on Australian Beef as 205,000-Ton Quota Nears Limit
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 28

China Imposes 55% Tariff on Australian Beef as 205,000-Ton Quota Nears Limit

4 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · May 28
  • Mid-June is the earliest the new 55% Chinese tariff on Australian beef could take effect, after Beijing warned Australia had already used 80% of its 205,000-ton annual quota.
  • China announced the quota system in late December for major suppliers including Australia and Brazil, saying it was designed to protect domestic farmers and producers.
  • Australia’s red meat industry expects the hit from China to be cushioned by strong demand in the US and Southeast Asia, limiting the broader export impact.
  • The move adds pressure to one of Australia’s major beef export channels while pushing producers to rely more heavily on alternative markets.
With a historic US beef shortage, can Australian imports truly shield American consumers from soaring prices at the supermarket?
As China's tariff reshuffles global trade, which beef-exporting nation will ultimately emerge as the biggest winner?
Is China's new beef tariff about protecting farmers, or is it a strategic play to control global food supply chains?