logo
China's trade with Asia could plug hole left by US tariffs, economists say

China's trade with Asia could plug hole left by US tariffs, economists say

China's growth could drop by as much as one percentage point this year if soaring US import tariffs hold up, but its increasingly deep ties with Southeast Asia can help offset that loss, a regional economic surveillance body said on Tuesday.
Advertisement
US import tariffs of 145 per cent on Chinese shipments will limit expansion of the world's second-largest economy to a 'quite optimistic' 4.8 per cent this year, said Hoe Ee Khor, chief economist with the Asean+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO).
The office made its prediction based on a strong first quarter followed by weak periods, particularly the second half of the year. Beijing has made 'around 5 per cent' its
official gross domestic product growth target for 2025.
'With the new tariff of 145 per cent, exports are going to be hit quite hard,' Khor said at a news conference on Tuesday. 'The tariff will definitely cause exports from China to drop substantially.'
The economic surveillance office, which tracks developments in China, Japan, South Korea and the 10-member
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) bloc, said Chinese reliance on the US market – which provided some US$525 billion in export value in 2024 – will set it back this year and next if the US tariff rate does not change, with a projection of 4 per cent GDP growth in 2026.
Advertisement
US President Donald Trump has launched a protracted trade conflict with China, sending tariff rates through the stratosphere and leading to rates of 125 per cent being imposed by Beijing in reply. While there have been recent, perhaps temporary, exemptions allowed
for certain goods , it is unclear how the landscape will evolve.
China's increasingly tight trade and investment ties with Southeast Asia will help fill the void left by limited access to the US market, AMRO economists said at the conference.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China fears Nvidia chips could track, trace and shut down its AIs
China fears Nvidia chips could track, trace and shut down its AIs

AllAfrica

time6 hours ago

  • AllAfrica

China fears Nvidia chips could track, trace and shut down its AIs

Beijing has asked Nvidia to explain whether its H20 artificial intelligence chips have backdoors that could allow the United States to position and remotely shut them down. Chinese pundits said similar probes could be extended to other American-made chips. The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) stated on July 31 that it summoned US tech giant Nvidia over security risks related to its H20 AI chip, which had been sold to China. 'Nvidia's AI chips have been alleged to pose serious security risks, and some US lawmakers have called for advanced chips exported abroad to be equipped with 'tracking and positioning' functions,' said the CAC. The CAC said in a press release that American AI experts have confirmed that the 'tracking and positioning' and 'remote shutdown' technologies of Nvidia chips have matured. It requested that Nvidia explain and submit relevant proof materials regarding this issue. On the same day, Nvidia said its chips do not contain backdoors that would allow anyone to access or remotely control them. It said cybersecurity is critically important to the company. Beijing's summoning of Nvidia came after Reuters reported on July 29 that Nvidia had placed orders for 300,000 H20 chipsets (worth about US$3.6 billion) with the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) a week earlier. It also followed the trade talks between US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng in Sweden on July 28-29. In April, the US government stopped Nvidia from shipping its H20 products to China. When Republican US Senator Tom Cotton introduced the 'Chip Security Act' on May 9, the bill received little to no significant media attention at the time. The bill requires AI chips to be subject to export regulations and mandates that products containing these chips be equipped with location-tracking systems to aid in detecting diversion, smuggling or other unauthorized use. It received support from bipartisan lawmakers in the House of Representatives. 'As Congress's chip designer, AI programmer and PhD physicist, I know we have the technical tools to prevent powerful AI technology from getting into the wrong hands,' said Congressman Bill Foster. 'With advanced AI chips being smuggled into China and posing a national security risk, Congress must act.' Following meetings between US and Chinese officials in London on June 9, China agreed to resume shipments of rare earth minerals to the US. In return, the US agreed to allow Chinese firms to use its electronic design automation (EDA) software and resume the shipment of H20 chips and C919 flight engine parts to China. Some commentators said the strong demand for H20 from Chinese firms may hurt Huawei Technologies' Ascend AI chips' market share. Wang Xinxi, a columnist specializing in the technology, media and telecommunications (TMT) sector, says in an article that the Ascend 910B has already surpassed H20 in terms of computing power. He says Chinese technology firms still use the H20 only because of its higher bandwidth and software support on the CUDA platform. 'Although the US Congress has not yet passed the Chip Security Act, Nvidia may have already added location-tracking functions in its chips,' he writes. 'All Nvidia computing chips have private data areas where the data is encrypted, so it is technically possible to add a backdoor.' Citing Qihoo 360 Chairperson Zhou Hongyi's recent comments, Chen claims that malicious code can be implanted in a chip during the wafer manufacturing, packaging and testing processes. He says it's difficult for Chinese end-users to identify these unsafe products within the global supply chain, which involves numerous suppliers and distributors. 'If there is any security loophole, Chinese firms must stop using H20,' he adds. 'In the end, companies that use Chinese AI chips will win.' 'Imagine if such 'backdoor' probes were expanded to other major American chip manufacturers in China like Micron, Wall Street investors would quickly sell their semiconductor stocks,' Chen Kai, a Fujian-based writer, says in an article. 'The H20 under probes is a 'freak' from the beginning as it is the downgraded version of the H100,' he writes. 'The Trump administration thought China would thank the US for relaxing its chip export control, and it would easily obtain the Chinese rare earth. It did not expect Nvidia to face security probes.' In 2019, the US banned Huawei routers due to concerns about backdoors. The US Department of Commerce added Huawei to its Entity List in May 2019. In May, Nvidia's Chief Executive Jensen Huang said that tracking massive AI servers or accelerators weighing several tons should not be difficult. However, he said, finding the AI chips after they are sold is impossible. Joseph Hoefer, a Washington, D.C.-based government relations strategist focused on AI, said the intent behind the Chip Security Act is understandable, but its approach creates more problems than it solves. 'First, real-time location tracking of chips is simply not feasible at scale,' Hoefer said. 'Attempting to derive meaningful national security insights from hardware geolocation data would require vast infrastructure, reliable international cooperation, and intensive verification protocols. That level of control does not exist in today's global tech ecosystem.' Secondly, he said, any system tracking chip locations would become an immediate cybersecurity vulnerability. Lastly, he said the compliance burden would fall on responsible US chip makers, which would have to spend time and money implementing unproven tracking systems, navigating regulatory ambiguity, and reporting false positives. Some IT experts have said that, technically, Nvidia can utilize its ecosystem of software and tools, such as the Nvidia Management Library (NVML) and Data Center GPU Manager (DCGM), to identify the locations of its AI chips, each of which has a unique serial number. It would be similar to what Google does to track and manage its AI chips. Google has centralized inventory and asset management systems that track every component, including custom chips such as Tensor Processing Units (TPUs), from manufacturing to deployment. Google's datacenter orchestration and resource management (Borg) can track the real-time performance of every chip. Others argue that even if a chip management software can determine the location of a suspicious AI chip cluster, it will be too late, as it means Chinese firms have already obtained and deployed the chips. Alphabet's Google has already started tracking the location of its in-house AI chips and others in its vast network of data centers for security purposes, Reuters reported on May 6, citing two sources familiar with the matter. Read: Chinese worry Nvidia H20 chips are poisoned wine for AI industry

New committee, bailout talk: is China launching a fresh property rescue effort?
New committee, bailout talk: is China launching a fresh property rescue effort?

South China Morning Post

time20 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

New committee, bailout talk: is China launching a fresh property rescue effort?

China's central bank confirmed on Friday that it had established a new financial stability committee to defuse the nation's mounting debt risks, as a senior government adviser suggested that Beijing needed to inject 1 trillion yuan (US$139 billion) into the property sector to stabilise developers' balance sheets. The suggestion by Yin Zhongli, a counsellor for China's State Council, comes as Beijing continues to wrestle with a four-year property crisis sparked by developer Evergrande Group's default in mid-2021. Yin, also a senior real estate finance expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, warned that developers were still weighed down by high debts despite a recent uptick in home sales in the property market. China's central bank announced in its midyear report on Friday that it had set up a new macroprudential and financial stability committee as part of an ongoing derisking effort. More robust action was needed to help developers liquidate their assets, Yin suggested. 'Given the large capital shortfall facing these companies, I suggest … setting up a dedicated state-backed agency to provide capital injections to property developers that meet certain criteria,' he wrote in the July issue of the Tsinghua Financial Review. The Ministry of Finance should fund the injections by issuing special treasury bonds, with a proposed 1 trillion yuan 'real estate stabilisation trust' set up to channel the funds to eligible developers, Yin said. The funds should be channelled to some or all of the country's 30 largest private property firms, with the government taking convertible preferred shares from the developers with a conversion period of five years or more, he added.

Many silver linings in China's export slowdown
Many silver linings in China's export slowdown

AllAfrica

time21 hours ago

  • AllAfrica

Many silver linings in China's export slowdown

China's export machine—the core driver of its economic power for decades—is starting to falter. New data signals that overseas orders are weakening, raising alarm bells for those who have long viewed China as a consistent source of global momentum. A slowdown in outbound shipments suggests the country's extraordinary trade surpluses may be approaching their ceiling. Without new policy moves, the risk is that this key engine of global growth could begin to idle—just as the rest of the world is looking for new forward motion. Recent purchasing manager data reveals a clear drop in new export orders, with both official and private surveys falling short of expectations. This is significant not only for China but for the world. When China cools, the effects ripple outward—impacting commodity exporters, multinationals, emerging markets and global equity indices. Yet while the signals merit close attention, they do not warrant panic. In fact, for investors, it's a moment that demands precision, not pessimism. The July trade data due Thursday (August 7) is expected to show a 5% year-on-year rise in exports and a staggering $103.4 billion monthly surplus. But as with June's even higher surplus of US$114.8 billion, the surface numbers are misleading. Exports to the United States fell nearly 11% that month, underscoring growing trade friction and weakening demand in key markets. To remain competitive, Chinese firms have been slashing prices. Factory gate prices have been falling since late 2022, making the country's manufactured goods extraordinarily cheap. This has been a boon for overseas buyers—and a temporary cushion for exporters—but it's also a warning. Sustained deflation isn't a strength; it reflects weak domestic demand, overcapacity and thinning margins. Even so, it's critical to recognize that China's manufacturing and export sector remains vast, technologically advanced and globally integrated. The export slowdown we're now seeing is not a collapse—it's a deceleration from breakneck speed. And that shift opens a window for global investors to reposition for what comes next. As Chinese policymakers weigh their next move, the opportunity lies in anticipating where capital will flow in response. So far, Chinese government stimulus has been modest and targeted, but the pressure is growing. A more proactive policy response—be it through interest rate moves, consumption incentives or infrastructure support—could reinvigorate demand and lift sentiment. Investors with exposure to sectors sensitive to domestic recovery—such as materials, construction or consumer tech—should watch this space closely. Beyond China, this transition presents openings elsewhere. Countries across Southeast Asia, South Asia and Latin America are already capturing global interest as alternative manufacturing bases and consumption markets. This isn't about decoupling from China—it's about diversifying exposure. The relative winners will be those economies that combine political stability, reform momentum and access to global capital. China's export slowdown also forces a reassessment of risk and resilience. Currency dynamics, for instance, are shifting. The renminbi remains under pressure due to weaker export receipts and persistent capital outflows. While this weighs on investor returns in China in the short term, it improves competitiveness and may eventually support a rebound in export momentum—especially if global demand firms in late 2025. Meanwhile, global equity markets are rebalancing. China will no longer be the automatic offset to Western economic weakness it once was, and investors must rethink their global macro assumptions accordingly. But that also frees up capital for other stories—ones driven by services, innovation, energy transition and demographic strength. These themes are gaining traction in portfolios as the old China-dominated playbook fades. None of this implies abandoning China. The long-term fundamentals remain intact: vast human capital, global manufacturing scale, dominance in sectors like clean energy and EVs, and growing outbound investment. But exposure should be thoughtful—focused on quality, valuations and alignment with new policy directions. Yes, the warning lights are flashing for China's export momentum. The numbers are softening, sentiment is muted and global demand is uneven. But for those prepared to read beyond the headlines, this is not a time for retreat. It's a time to assess, realign and get ahead of the rotation that's already underway in global capital flows. Every slowdown is also a moment of recalibration. And from recalibration comes opportunity—for those willing to shift focus, reassess risk and embrace a broader global view. China's trade engine may no longer be running at full throttle, but it's far from out of fuel. And around it, new engines are revving up.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store