U.S., China Reach New Trade Understanding Amid Renewed Negotiations and Economic Shifts


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by Worthy News Washington D.C. Bureau Staff

(Worthy News) – The United States and China have finalized a new agreement to advance the Geneva framework, marking a significant step forward in their ongoing trade negotiations, officials announced Friday.

President Donald Trump revealed the new deal had been signed on June 25, calling it a breakthrough in long-stalled negotiations. “We’re starting to open up China—things that never really could have happened,” he told reporters, though he withheld further details.

The White House later clarified that both nations had agreed to a framework to implement the Geneva deal struck in May. That initial agreement followed a high-stakes meeting in Switzerland involving U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng, alongside Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter. At that time, tariffs stood at 145 percent on Chinese goods entering the U.S., with Beijing retaliating with 125 percent tariffs on American exports.

President Trump wrote in a June 11 Truth Social post that tariffs had since shifted to a 55 percent U.S. rate on Chinese goods, compared to 10 percent on American goods entering China, proclaiming, “RELATIONSHIP IS EXCELLENT!”

The June 25 agreement reportedly came after further talks in London, where negotiators finalized a mechanism to release rare earth mineral exports from China while easing U.S. restrictions on high-tech exports and academic visas. One of the critical minerals involved is samarium, used in the production of heat-resistant magnets essential to U.S. military equipment such as missiles and fighter jets.

“China will review and approve the export applications of controlled items that meet the conditions,” China’s Commerce Ministry announced Friday. “The United States will cancel a series of restrictive measures taken against China accordingly.”

In a separate but potentially related announcement, GE Appliances—owned by China’s Haier Group since 2016—revealed it would invest $490 million to expand its Louisville, Kentucky washer and dryer manufacturing plant, creating 800 full-time jobs. CEO Kevin Nolan cited the current “economic and policy environment” as a factor in reshoring production.

President Trump also lifted restrictions allowing China to resume purchasing oil from Iran—a strategic shift after months of sanctions. “Hopefully, they will be purchasing plenty from the U.S., also,” Trump said, touting the move as part of his broader economic strategy.

The new developments come just ahead of Trump’s July 9 deadline for U.S. trading partners to finalize reciprocal tariff agreements or face significantly higher levies. While the White House has hinted at flexibility, it has also warned that countries unwilling to comply could see baseline tariffs of 10 percent jump considerably.

The U.S.-China trade saga began with an aggressive tariff rollout by President Trump in April, aimed at rebalancing what he described as unfair trade deficits. While many nations sought immediate resolution, China responded with its own retaliatory measures, triggering a full-blown trade war.

Now, after a series of high-level meetings, both sides are showing signs of compromise. “After the London talks, the teams of China and the United States maintained close communication,” the Chinese Commerce Ministry said. “Recently, with approval, the two sides further confirmed the details of the framework.”

Whether these developments signal a lasting thaw or merely a pause in economic tensions remains to be seen. Still, with manufacturing returning to U.S. soil, high-tech trade resuming, and tariffs recalibrated, the latest agreement represents a notable shift in the geopolitical economic landscape.

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