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Senior Chinese official warns that any future US tariff hikes will backfire

Higher tariffs on Chinese exports will backfire, just increasing prices paid by consumers, while China can manage to weather the impact of such "external shocks", a senior Commerce Ministry official said Friday in Beijing.

Responding to a reporter's question about U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's plan to impose 60% tariffs on imports from China, Vice Commerce Minister Wang Shouwen said that would "not solve the country’s own trade deficit problem".

Wang said: "On the contrary, it pushes up the prices of the country's imports from China and other countries," noting that increased prices add to inflation.

China is willing to talk with the US on a basis of mutual respect, for the benefit of both countries, Wang said.

"We believe that if China and the US can maintain a stable, healthy, and sustainable development trend in economic and trade relations, it will be beneficial (to everyone)," he said.

Wang noted that China's total foreign trade including imports and exports reached 36 trillion yuan (nearly $5tn/€4.18tn) in January-October, up about 5% from the same period of 2023.

Despite the upbeat message, the threat of higher tariffs, following on increases during Trump's first administration and additional hikes in import duties by the administration of President Joe Biden, threatens to add to Beijing's woes.

China's ruling Communist Party is struggling to revive growth and reverse a downturn in the property market and deal with mounting local government debts and high employment among Chinese youths.

A 60% duty on Chinese imports could shave off 2.5 percentage points, or about half, of China's projected economic growth, according to an analysis published earlier this year by UBS.

During Friday's news conference Wang and other

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