Scott Bessent rips ‘unhinged’ Chinese trade negotiator, announces ‘price floors’ in latest Beijing pushback
WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent described China’s lead trade negotiator as “unhinged” Wednesday — and announced the US is planning “price floors” and “forward buying” to prevent future supply chain disruptions by Beijing’s export controls.
Bessent made the remarks five days after President Trump threatened an additional 100% tariff on Chinese goods in response to Beijing’s rules requiring companies to seek permission to export products made with rare-earth or critical minerals, reducing the flow of batteries, magnets and semiconductors to the US.
The Treasury secretary revealed more of the backstory behind China’s surprise rule changes announced Oct. 9, claiming that a bellicose trade emissary named Li Chenggang “showed up uninvited” in DC on Aug. 28 and threatened that “China would unleash chaos on the global system” if the US didn’t abandon docking fees for Chinese ships.
“There was a lower level trade person who was slightly unhinged here in August … threatening, saying China would unleash chaos on the global system if the US went ahead with our docking fees on Chinese ships, and this is something they clearly were planning all along,” Bessent said during CNBC’s “Invest in America” forum.
“I think things can de-escalate. We have things that are more powerful than the rare earth export controls that the Chinese want to put on — and to be clear, this is China versus the world.”
Bessent said that price floors, which could prevent China from undercutting upstart competitors in the critical fields, are coming as a tactic to secure supply chains — noting that US carmakers already have reported a slowdown in deliveries of essential magnets.
