President Trump’s escalating, tit-for-tat tariff war with China threatens to upend key US industries — from agriculture and food to planes and semiconductors — risking massive financial losses, downsizings and closures, experts told The Post.
On Wednesday afternoon, Trump raised the tariff on imports from China to 125%, “effective immediately,” after a 104% tariff took effect overnight. The stepped-up China tariff came even as he announced a 90-day pause on taxes for most other nations.
That was after Beijing earlier Wednesday raised its own tax on imports from the US to its own shores to 84% from 34% — saying in a statement, “The US’s practice of escalating tariffs on China is a mistake on top of a mistake.”
Trump’s tariffs on Beijing are an attempt to level the widening trade gap between the countries. China enjoyed a $361 billion surplus over the US in 2024, according to the Financial Times.
However, China’s 84% tax could send costs catastrophically soaring for US retail, electronics, automotive and semiconductor firms, like Boeing and Coca-Cola, which are major exporters to the Mainland, making them less competitive in a substantial market.
“US exporters will be priced out of key markets overnight,” warned David Warrick, executive vice president at Overhaul, a supply chain risk management company.
