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What caused the trade war between US and China?

The trade war between the United States and China is one of significant economic conflicts of 21st century.

It formally erupted in January 2018 under Trump administration, its roots lie in decades of shifting economic power, deep structural grievances, and a growing geopolitical rivalry.

The conflict wasn’t sparked by a single event, but rather a economic and political factors.

1. Trade Deficit and Economic National Security

One of the primary drivers for the U.S. was the bilateral trade deficitBy 2017, the U.S. trade deficit with China had grown to approximately $375 billion.

2. Intellectual Property (IP) and Technology Transfer

Perhaps the most legally significant cause was Section 301 investigation launched by the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) in 2017. The investigation concluded that China engaged in several “unfair” practices:

3. Structural Economic Differences

The conflict was also a clash of two very different economic systems:

The tarrif war progressed through a series of events,

Date U.S. Action China’s Response
Jan 2018 Tariffs on solar panels and washing machines. Investigation into U.S. sorghum exports.
Mar 2018 25% tariff on steel and 10% on aluminum. Tariffs on 128 U.S. products (fruit, wine, pork).
July 2018 Official Start: 25% tariffs on $34B of Chinese goods. Equivalent tariffs on U.S. goods (soybeans, autos).
2019 Blacklisting of Huawei over security concerns. Restrictions on unreliable entities and rare earths.

4. The Geopolitical Thucydides Trap

Beyond numbers and laws, many analysts see trade war as a symptom of a broader geopolitical struggle. As China rose toward becoming world’s largest economy, U.S. moved from a policy of engagement to strategic competition. The trade war became a tool to slow China’s rise and protect U.S. global hegemony.

Current State (2026)

Phase One deal was signed in 2020 to pause escalation, many of structural issues remain. Biden administration maintained most of Trump-era tariffs and even expanded them in 2024 to include 100% tariffs on Chinese Electric Vehicles (EVs). Entering 2026, conflict has evolved from a simple trade war into a broader de-risking of the two world powers economies.

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