Explainer | As the dust settles from Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’, what’s China’s effective tariff rate?
With US ‘reciprocal tariffs’, taxes on Chinese goods have climbed even further – with some analysts predicting an effective rate of ‘almost 70 per cent’

Since US President Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January, he has raised tariffs on Chinese imports numerous times, picking up where his previous administration left off with another bilateral trade war.
Here, we attempt to summarise what these new tariffs include, the effect they could have on China’s economy and compare them with the rates from an earlier, more cordial era.
What is the new effective tariff rate?
According to a Citi research note published on Thursday, the US’ effective tariff rate on Chinese goods has increased to around 65 per cent after Trump’s unveiling of new reciprocal tariffs and the end of the duty exemption on low-value imports.
The “de minimis” exemption – a reprieve from import duties for packages with a value of US$800 or less – is also scheduled to be phased out on May 2.
Analysts at Capital Economics said the “average US tariff rate on China is now almost 70 per cent”.