China’s ‘Mr Big’ is playing a dangerous game with Trump

President Xi Jinping has a nickname in China. Instead of calling him by name, people commonly use Da Da, or “Mr Big”. After all, he is the nation’s most powerful politician in decades, serving a precedent-defying third term. He also dares to challenge the world’s biggest economy, and China’s only real rival, promoting a multipolar global order instead of unchallenged US dominance.
It should come as no surprise, then, that China is acting differently from Canada or Mexico as US President Donald Trump imposes trade tariffs. Not willing to capitulate to what it sees as bullying, Beijing is taking the 10 per cent extra levy in stride.
Xi Jinping won’t allow himself to be pushed around by Trump.Credit: AP
Compared to 2018, when US tariffs were last imposed, China may feel it can handle the heat better. Exports to the US account for only about 15 per cent of the total, versus 19 per cent at the onset of Trump’s first trade war. In addition, Chinese firms have been diversifying their supply chains, opening factories in nations such as Mexico and Vietnam that until recently looked less vulnerable to US tariffs and wouldn’t be drawing attention with “Made in China” goods.
Initially, Xi seems to be playing a gentle match, hoping to prevent tensions from escalating. Beijing’s retaliation, such as targeted tariffs on oil and liquefied natural gas, are narrower in scope than the 10 per cent blank levy from the White House. An antitrust probe into Google has no real bite, since the tech giant largely pulled out of China after 2010.
But Trump may not be dancing around. He knows he has the upper hand as the growth trajectory between the US and China, which still has to find its feet after COVID, diverges in his favour. So the question now is whether Xi has a full trade war game plan mapped out. Is he willing to make hard choices?
First, he can put aside fiscal conservatism and bring out the bazooka. Even before Trump’s tariffs hit, exporters – the only bright spot in a deflationary economy – were feeling gloomy, judging by the latest Caixin PMI data.
A meltdown in real estate investment, as well as potential loss of export orders, are leaving a huge hole in aggregate demand. According to a back-of-the-envelope calculation from Alpine Macro, a financial research outlet, China needs to deploy a spending package of at least 4 per cent of gross domestic product per year to get out of its deflationary trap, and more if harsh tariffs are imposed. Fiscal measures announced so far, such as local debt swaps, are far from impressive. They don’t create any new money to lift the economy.
Second, a currency war may just be necessary. So far, the People’s Bank of China has been reluctant to weaken its daily fix, keeping it stronger than 7.2 yuan per dollar over fears of excessive capital outflows. But if a big stimulus package doesn’t come about, interest-rate cuts and a weaker yuan may be the only way to counter Trump’s tariffs.