As the sixth round of US-China trade negotiations approaches, both nations are maintaining open communication channels to stabilize bilateral economic relations, China’s Ministry of Commerce confirmed during a Thursday press briefing. The ministry emphasized Beijing’s commitment to equal-footed consultations aimed at managing differences and expanding practical cooperation between the world’s two largest economies.
The upcoming discussions have attracted significant attention from analysts who anticipate focus areas will include extending previous short-term agreements and establishing frameworks for future collaboration. Bai Ming, researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, identified key negotiation priorities as China’s demand for the US to abandon restrictive practices against Chinese high-tech industries and Washington’s desire for increased access to strategic materials.
Recent economic analyses have challenged the fundamental rationale behind tariff strategies, with multiple studies revealing American consumers bear the overwhelming burden of import taxes. A China Securities Co report published Wednesday demonstrated a 92% tariff pass-through rate in 2025, meaning US importers absorbed $92 of every $100 in additional tariff costs. For Chinese goods specifically, which faced cumulative tariff increases of approximately 26 percentage points, the pass-through rate reached 94%, with Chinese exporters reducing dollar-denominated prices by merely 2.5%.
These findings align with a Federal Reserve Bank of New York study indicating approximately 90% of economic impacts from 2025 tariffs were shouldered by US consumers and businesses rather than foreign exporters. The Washington-based Tax Foundation further estimated these tariffs effectively created an average $1,000 annual tax increase per American household.
The trade landscape shifted significantly on February 20 when the US Supreme Court ruled the previous administration lacked constitutional authority to impose broad-based tariffs under emergency powers legislation, invalidating specific tariffs on Chinese goods. However, the Biden administration promptly implemented temporary import surcharges for up to 150 days under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which took effect Tuesday.
A Ministry of Commerce spokesperson stated Wednesday that China would ‘take all necessary measures to resolutely safeguard its legitimate rights and interests’ should the US continue advancing relevant investigations, highlighting the ongoing tensions even as diplomatic exchanges continue.









