China again flags tariff cuts for US agricultural trade after Trump-Xi meeting, but still no details

Reuters | 20 May 2026

China again flags tariff cuts for US agricultural trade after Trump-Xi meeting, but still no details

By Ella Cao, Daphne Zhang and Lewis Jackson

China and the U.S. have agreed to cut tariffs on agricultural trade as part of a broader ​trade deal, the Ministry of Commerce said on Wednesday in a statement ‌that left several questions about implementation unanswered.

U.S. President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, met in Beijing last week, where the White House said China agreed to buy $17 billion ​worth of U.S. agriculture annually on top of an existing multi-billion-dollar soybean ​commitment.

The commitment would take Chinese imports of U.S. agriculture back towards all-time highs, ⁠but fulfilling it would likely require Beijing to drop its tariffs imposed during ​the trade war.

Both parties "in principle agreed to include relevant [agricultural] products in the reciprocal tariff ​reduction framework, while also setting guiding goals to expand two-way trade in agricultural products," the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement that largely echoed one made on Saturday.

The statement did not say ​what products could be included or mention the $17 billion commitment.

Chinese readouts tend to ​be more circumspect than those from Washington. Beijing bought 12 million tons of soybeans late last year ‌as ⁠part of a deal agreed upon at a summit in October, though it never acknowledged the commitment in public.

The statement also referenced the board of trade which will be set up to select and oversee $30 billion worth of goods where tariffs ​will be reduced to ​historic levels or ⁠lower.

"We think the Chinese side will focus those reductions on U.S. agricultural products," said Even Rogers Pay, a director at Trivium ​China.

"The $17 billion purchase agreement and 25 million metric tons soybean ​deal, together, ⁠would roughly total out to just over $30 billion."

The statement also said China had re-certified U.S. beef company registrations, as Reuters reported last week, and that it would resume poultry exports ⁠from ​some U.S. states where there had been avian ​influenza outbreaks.

China also said it would discuss agricultural biotechnology issues that were of concern to Washington, without elaborating.


  Source: Reuters