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Ana Swanson, who covers trade and international economics for The New York Times, talks to Jeanna Smialek, The Times’s Brussels bureau chief, and Keith Bradsher, The Times’s Beijing bureau chief, ...
The United States accounted for only 3 percent of China’s natural gas imports last year. Those purchases could now dry up ...
The economy grew steadily from January through March, but U.S. tariffs pose a risk for China in the coming weeks and months.
Small factories with tiny profit margins have played a central role in China’s international competitiveness. Many could now ...
Beijing has suspended exports of certain rare earth minerals and magnets that are crucial for the world’s car, semiconductor ...
A staggering $1.9 trillion in extra industrial lending is fueling a continued flood of exports that could be spread even ...
The U.S. tariffs on transshipment countries like Vietnam and Cambodia are so steep that they could force a major reassessment of global supply chains.
A deepening trade war could further weaken ties between the superpowers. The effects will reverberate everywhere.
China has suspended exports of a wide range of critical minerals and magnets as part of China’s retaliation for President ...
The Chinese government said it would match President Trump’s tariff, and also barred a group of American companies from doing ...
But the United States did little despite concerns about control of supplies. By Keith Bradsher Keith Bradsher, who has covered China’s rare earth industry since 2009, reported from Beijing ...
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