China’s Global Exports Continue to Grow Despite Trump Tariffs
As President Trump has imposed steep tariffs on China, American importers are buying much less. However, the rest of the world is making up the difference—China has offset the decline from America with breathtaking speed. Shipments to other parts of the world have surged this year, demonstrating that China’s manufacturing dominance will not be easily slowed. Chinese exports are on track to reach another record this year.
This resilience is because China was prepared. It has been seeking out new customers for years, and its massive manufacturing investment allows it to sell goods at low prices. “They should not be surprised that China is able to find markets outside of the advanced economies,” said Mary Lovely, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Last week, Mr. Trump reduced the tariffs he imposed on China, though they remain at heights not seen in decades. He insists that his tariffs will force a revival of American factories and create jobs—a pledge contested by many economists and manufacturing experts. It is also unclear how effective his policies will be in stemming the flow of goods that originate in China and route through other countries before arriving in the United States.
The rest of the world is caught between the two superpowers. Some countries, including Vietnam (28%) and members of the European Union (11%), are deeply concerned about the risk posed by China’s exports to their own industries. In response, China faces a backlash in the form of tariffs in regions like Europe.
Other nations, such as Argentina (57%) and Nigeria (45%), are buying low-cost Chinese technology to modernize their economies but are running up wider trade imbalances with China.
For years, Americans have turned to China to outfit their homes and stock their offices. While the volume of Chinese exports remains enormous, the declines this year are widespread and drastic. The United States is buying less of almost everything from China.
Take, for example, plastic goods. China exported $5 billion worth of these products—from laundry baskets to plastic forks—to the United States between July and October, down 16 percent from a year earlier. Last year, over a quarter of all Chinese-made furniture, including mattresses and lamps, went to the United States; now that number is closer to a fifth.
China’s exports of phones (down 47%) and computers (down 54%) to the United States were among the categories that declined the most. Mr. Trump exempted such consumer electronics from most of his tariffs this year, but Apple, Hewlett-Packard, and other manufacturers have continued to diversify their supply chains outside China. The United States now gets most of its smartphones from India and its laptop computers from Vietnam, according to the latest quarterly data available from the U.S. Census Bureau as of June.
Meanwhile, China is flooding developing economies in Africa (42% growth) and South America (13% growth) with cars, trucks, bikes, and ships. It is also expanding in Europe (7%) and Asia (14%) by shipping batteries and iron products.
After decades of top-down priorities established by Beijing’s industrial policies, China has become the world’s leading producer of cars, batteries, and solar panels. Struggling consumer demand in its domestic economy has put even more pressure on Chinese companies to find new business abroad.
China also produced record amounts of steel over the past few years. This steel is now sold across the world at prices sometimes cheaper than bottled water. Many African countries bought few of these items from China before this year; for example, China sold only about 100 electric cars to Nigeria two years ago, but this year it has already sold thousands.
Solar panel shipments to Algeria thus far this year are nearly four times those of all last year.
China’s growing exports to Africa come as Mr. Trump has pulled back aid to the continent. Chinese companies are sacrificing profits by selling to Africa at low prices but are, in many cases, gaining influence. “The margins may not be as high,” said Ilaria Mazzocco, a deputy director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “But for those markets, it’s entirely transformational to have access to this technology at affordable prices.”
There are exceptions to China’s ability to successfully make up for lost revenue by selling to American customers and redirecting exports elsewhere. Chinese companies, for example, make most of the world’s toys, and the United States has long been its largest customer. Over the summer, China’s exports of video game consoles, costumes, and board games fell by $3.5 billion compared to last year, mostly due to a steep decline in shipments to the United States.
It remains to be seen how effective Mr. Trump will be in pressuring countries, especially those in Asia, to reject rerouted Chinese exports as part of trade negotiations. These workarounds limited the impact of his trade measures with China during his first term.
One thing is certain: American consumers are buying more goods from other parts of Asia. In September, Thailand’s exports to the United States rose by 33 percent. Taiwan’s exports also grew by 51 percent, and Singapore’s by 13 percent.
The shifts in China’s exports are part of what is expected to be a continuing and unpredictable transformation. Mr. Trump’s tariff reduction last week, which he said lowered overall tariffs on China to about 45 percent from about 55 percent, could stabilize China’s exports to the United States, said Gerard DiPippo, associate director of the RAND China Research Center.
But despite agreeing to a one-year trade truce with China, Mr. Trump is considering whether to impose additional tariffs on industries dominated by China, such as pharmaceuticals and drones. He is also vowing to wean America off its reliance on China for some critical minerals.
With more than three years left in office, Mr. Trump’s campaign to reshape trade is unlikely to end here.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/11/03/world/asia/china-exports-trump-tariffs.html