China said on Wednesday it would extend a suspension of additional tariffs on United States goods for one year, making official an agreement reached in talks between Presidents Xi Jinping and Donald Trump last week.
The two leaders held discussions in South Korea at the end of October that effectively extended a delicate truce for a year, following several rounds of trade negotiations in recent months.
A statement published Wednesday on the Ministry of Finance website, citing Beijing’s State Council, confirmed the details of the extension, stating that “for one year the 24 percent tariff on US goods will continue to be suspended, (and) a 10 percent tariff on US goods will remain”. The statement confirmed the pause follows “the consensus reached in the China–US economic and trade consultations” and would be effective from November 10.
Trump on Tuesday formalised an agreement that Washington would cut its additional tariffs on Chinese imports from 20 per cent to 10 per cent, also effective from November 10.
Temperatures had spiked between the world’s two biggest economies this year as Washington and Beijing imposed escalating tariffs on each other’s products, with duties on both sides reaching prohibitive triple-digit levels at one point, significantly hampering trade.
The two have been engaged in an uneasy truce since then, as top economic leaders met several times for talks in recent months, with tensions surging over export controls and other issues.
In a separate statement, China announced it would “cease implementing the additional tariff measures” imposed in a March order that hit a list of American farm products.
That original move was a response to Trump doubling additional tariffs on Chinese goods over Beijing’s handling of fentanyl—tariffs which are now set to revert to 10 percent starting next week. Beijing had placed an additional 15 percent levy on chicken, wheat, corn, and cotton imported from the US, and an additional 10 per cent tariff on American soybeans, pork, beef, dairy, and other farm products, a measure that had hurt a key source of Trump’s political support: farmers. More than half of US soybean exports went to China last year, but Beijing halted all orders as the trade dispute deepened.
Also following the high-level talks, Beijing agreed to suspend for one year restrictions on the export of rare earths technology. Rare earths are a strategic field dominated by China and are essential for manufacturing in defense, automobiles, and consumer electronics.
Washington in turn agreed to suspend for one year a move imposing “Entity List” export restrictions on affiliates of blacklisted foreign companies in which they had at least a 50 per cent stake, the Chinese commerce ministry said.
The United States also said it would halt for a year measures targeting China’s shipbuilding industry that led to both sides applying port fees against each other’s ships, it said. China would suspend its “countermeasures” after the US action, they added, for one year too.

