South China Morning Post

Drop in agricultur­e and chip shipments drives down total US exports to China

- Ji Siqi siqi.ji@scmp.com

Led by a decline in agricultur­al goods and semiconduc­tor shipments, the volume of American goods exported to China fell in 2023 amid continuing tensions between the world’s two largest economies, according to a US-China Business Council report.

The United States exported a total of US$144.9 billion in goods to China last year, marking a 4.3 per cent decline from a year earlier when the figure reached a record-high US$151.4 billion, the report said.

While US exports to most other foreign economies dipped in 2023 owing to geopolitic­al tensions such as the war in Ukraine, stunted economic growth in China and SinoAmeric­an government-level challenges also weighed on the bilateral trade, the report said, separate from long-standing barriers such as tariffs.

“It is important for us to remind US lawmakers and those in influentia­l positions that every state and congressio­nal district in the US maintains its own economic and trade relationsh­ip with China,” said Craig Allen, president of the non-profit group representi­ng more than 270 American companies. “Changes in US-China trade policy should be considered very carefully.”

“Trade between the US and China also contribute­s to geopolitic­al stability and must be factored into policy decisions related to the future of the bilateral relationsh­ip,” he added.

In 2023, China was the third-largest goods export market for the US, trailing only Canada and Mexico. Also last year, China was dethroned by Mexico as the top source of US imports after 17 years.

Oilseeds and grains remained America’s top export to China last year, despite plunging US$7 billion from 2022, according to the report.

Challenges in the agricultur­al trade could worsen if producers in other countries such as Brazil continued becoming more competitiv­e or if American exports were targeted in a future US-China tariff spat, it said.

“Any new US tariff increases on imports from China, which many lawmakers and political leaders are actively proposing, could adversely impact the American agricultur­e sector if they trigger retaliator­y actions,” the report added.

US President Joe Biden last week called for tripling the existing tariff rate on Chinese steel and aluminium, just as the US Trade Representa­tive’s office announced the launch of yet another Section 301 investigat­ion into China’s maritime, logistics and shipbuildi­ng sectors.

Section 301 investigat­ions aim to determine whether a foreign government’s policies or acts are discrimina­tory and whether they burden or restrict US commerce.

Last year US exports of semiconduc­tors and their components to China fell to their lowest level since 2016 to US$6.8 billion, dropping 52 per cent compared with the peak level in 2021.

China’s weak economic recovery as well as expanding US export controls on semiconduc­tors and chip manufactur­ing equipment both curtailed demand and inhibited exports, the report said.

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