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2026 m. gegužės 27 d., trečiadienis

China, Aiming to Outsmart Trump, Scraps Africa Tariffs

Trump and China have different goals. Trump wants at least some manufacturing to return to America. China needs to export its manufacturing output to the rest of the world as easily as possible. 

 

“JOHANNESBURG -- African countries are finding it harder to export to the U.S. since President Trump returned to the White House with a long list of tariffs.

 

But China sees their struggle as an opportunity.

 

Since May 1, Beijing has removed tariffs on all goods from 53 of 54 African nations in an effort to win business and influence across the continent. Everything from wine to sesame seeds and wool has been entering China tariff-free from everywhere except tiny Eswatini, which maintains diplomatic ties with Taiwan. Some analysts said the move could push Africa's population of more than a billion people and vast mineral resources further into Beijing's orbit.

 

Already Africa's largest trading partner, China is using the initiative to reinforce its self-promoted image as a champion of developing countries. Many African leaders and citizens have been receptive to Beijing's messaging, and see China as a role model for its efforts to lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty.

 

"The optics of this decision are politically astute," said Ronak Gopaldas, director at Signal Risk, an Africa-focused political-risk consulting firm. "It reinforces Beijing's image as a stable and dependable partner for Africa, particularly when contrasted with the more erratic and transactional posture that has characterized Washington in recent years."

 

The move could help China secure essential supply chains for critical minerals such as cobalt, copper and coltan. It also opens the door for more opportunities for Chinese companies to join with African governments on infrastructure, logistics and manufacturing projects that need Beijing's financing.

 

Kenya Deputy President Kithure Kindiki said at a Nairobi business forum in March that the zero-tariff agreement gives Kenya an opportunity to reduce its trade deficit with China, which stands at some $4 billion. He pointed to coffee, tea, macadamia nuts and avocados as agricultural products that could benefit under the new policy.

 

Gopaldas cautioned that in the short term, the policy, which builds on a 2024 Chinese decision granting tariff-free access to 33 least-developed African nations, is unlikely to shift the basic structure of the current trade relationship between Africa and China, which largely is characterized by the export of African raw materials to China and the export of Chinese finished products to Africa.

 

"It doesn't address the many nontariff barriers that hold back Africa-China trade," including strict phytosanitary requirements for agricultural exports to China, as well as weak logistics capacity and transport systems in many African nations, said Cobus van Staden, head of research at the China-Global South Project, a nonprofit.

 

Nigerian businesses have expressed concerns that high production costs, inadequate infrastructure and logistics bottlenecks remain major challenges, despite the increased competitiveness of their products in China.

 

As a least-developed country, Lesotho has enjoyed tariff-free access to Chinese markets since late 2024, but the tiny southern African nation will need to invest in production capacity, process goods locally, improve logistics, support exporters and build competitive industries to take full advantage of the agreement, said Mokhethi Shelile, Lesotho's former trade minister.

 

"If Lesotho can do that, the Chinese market could become a major growth engine," Shelile said. "If not, the benefits may remain limited and concentrated in raw commodity exports."

 

Beijing's initiative contrasts sharply with the Trump administration's approach. The U.S. hit South Africa, the continent's largest economy, and the mineral-rich Democratic Republic of Congo, with blanket U.S. tariffs of 30% and 15%, respectively, last year. Trump then instituted blanket 10% tariffs on all nations, but the legality of his actions remains under court review.

 

China's zero-tariff initiative might allow Beijing to regain some lost ground in Africa.

 

It also could open the way for its African trading partners to strengthen their own economies, at least if they can figure out how to add value to their commodities and agricultural goods, and produce exports that generate some more income.” [1]

 

1. World News: China, Aiming to Outsmart Trump, Scraps Africa Tariffs. Wexler, Alexandra.  Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y.. 27 May 2026: A6.  

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