U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war seems to have cooled off after a period of rising tensions with ChinaÌýthat spurred fears of a worldwide recessionÌý— but economists remain cautiously optimistic about the future of the Canadian and global economies.Ìý
On Monday, U.S. and Chinese officials announced they had reached a deal toÌýeliminate some tariffs while pausing others for 90 days,Ìýmutually lowering leviesÌýby a total 115 percentage points.Ìý
That brings the U.S. tariff rate on Chinese products toÌý30 per cent from 145 per cent, while China lowered its tariff rate on American goods toÌý10 per cent from 125 per cent.Ìý
U.S. and Chinese officials said Monday they had reached a deal to roll back most of their recent tariffs and call a 90-day truce in their trade war to allow for more talks on resolving their trade disputes. (AP Video / May 12, 2025)
“Yesterday, we achieved a total reset with China after productive talks in Geneva,” Trump said in a press conference Monday morning. “The talks in Geneva were very friendly, the relationship is very good. We are not looking to hurt China.”Ìý
StocksÌýsurged following the announcement. As of market close Monday,Ìýthe S&P 500 climbed 3.3 per cent while the Dow Jones industrial average jumped 2.8 per cent. In Toronto, theÌýS&P/TSX Composite indexÌýrose 0.7 per cent.
U.S. stocks leap after China and the United States announced a 90-day truce in their trade war. (AP Video / May 12, 2025)
“Although the 90-day ‘truce’ between the world’s two biggest economies is unleashing a global stock market rally today, there is still the hard economic data and the key now is to restore business and consumer confidence,” BMO economist Priscilla Thiagamoorthy wrote in a note to clients.Ìý
Thiagamoorthy pointed to April labour market statistics released last Friday, showing the Canadian economy had added just 7,400 jobs, while the unemployment rate rose to 6.9 per centÌý— the highestÌýsince November.Ìý
It was the first set of jobs data to clearly show the effects of Trump’s trade war with Canada. The manufacturing industry led job losses last month, shedding 31,000 positions, with most of the impact felt in Ontario.Ìý“Not good,” wroteÌýThiagamoorthy.Ìý
However, RBC economist Claire Fan believes the worst of the trade war might be behind us.Ìý
“You have two of the largest economies in the world de-escalating this very punitive trade war on each other. So that means global (economic) growth is going to, if anything, look a lot better this year,” she said in an interview. “For Canada, as an open trading economy, that’s good news.”Ìý
But, she joked, “I’m knocking on wood as we speak.”Ìý
Without a significant restructuring of global supply chains, Fan said Canadian inflation is poised to stay low, forecasting it to have fallen to 1.6 per cent in April fromÌý2.3 per cent the month prior. Statistics Canada will release April inflation figures on May 20.Ìý
Still, Fan expects the Canadian unemployment rate to keep rising to a 7.1 per cent peak (from 6.9 per cent currently) as companies continue to freeze hiring andÌýshed jobs amid tariff uncertainty.
U.S. and Chinese officials said Monday they had reached a deal to roll back most of their recent tariffs and call a 90-day pause to keep talking to resolve their trade disputes. (AP Video / May 12, 2025)
Scotiabank economist Derek Holt cautioned that other levies on China are still in effect, including sector-specific U.S. tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, solar panels, semiconductors, and steel and aluminum.Ìý
Chinese policies such as restrictions on critical minerals, and measures targeting individual American companies, apparently remain in place, he added.
It’sÌýunclear whether Monday’s tariff reductions will be enough to stimulate trade between the two nations again.Ìý
“This is not a deal, it’s just a de-escalation of tariff lunacy and we’ve seen temporary deals fall apart in the past,” Holt wrote in a note to clients.Ìý
“Celebrate for now, but the volatile history of relations between these two countries combined with Trump’s extremely erratic ways will leave markets on tenterhooks into the mid-August time frame,” Holt continued,Ìý“by which point either some heroic attempt at a grand deal is miraculously pulled off in record time, or we’re back at it all (over) again.”Ìý
China's delegation on Sunday described a meeting with US officials in Geneva as “candid, in-depth and constructive", after two days of bargaining in Switzerland following President Donald Trump imposing steep tariffs and Beijing retaliating. (AP Video / May 11, 2025)
With files from Star wires.Ìý
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