China Struck
back at U.S. Tariffs with an Export Pause
[ABS News Service/14.04.2025]
China has suspended exports of certain rare earth minerals
and magnets that are crucial for the world’s car, semiconductor and aerospace
industries. The move is in retaliation after President Trump’s sharp increase
in tariffs.
The metals and the special magnets made with them can now
be shipped out of China only with special export licenses. But Beijing has
barely started setting up a system for issuing the licenses. Industry
executives said that supplies of minerals and products outside the country
could run low.
Trump’s rapidly escalating trade war with China has
scrambled prospects for many global businesses. And there is no end in sight,
my colleagues Ana Swanson and Ben Casselman report.
The U.S. administration has been waiting for the Chinese
leader, Xi Jinping, to call Trump, but Beijing appears wary of putting Xi in an
unpredictable situation with the U.S. president.
Charm offensive: Today, Xi will
arrive in Vietnam, his first stop on a weeklong tour that will also take him to
Malaysia and Cambodia. He is expected to oversee the signing of around 40
agreements, including deals that would advance plans for Vietnam to accept
Chinese loans for part of a $8.3 billion railway connecting northern Vietnam
with China