The first meeting to break the US-China trade deadlock was held almost three weeks ago in the basement of the IMF headquarters, arranged under cover of secrecy.
US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent, who was attending the IMF spring meetings in Washington, met Chinaโs finance minister Lan Foโan to discuss the near complete breakdown in trade between the worldโs two biggest economies, according to people familiar with the matter.
The previously unreported encounter was the first high-level meeting between US and Chinese officials since Donald Trumpโs inauguration and the launch of his tariff war. The talks culminated this weekend in Geneva with Bessent and He Lifeng, Chinaโs vice-premier, agreeing a ceasefire that would slash respective tariffs by 115 percentage points for 90 days.
Despite both sides warning they were willing to dig in for a long haul, the truce proved easier and faster to agree than expected. One overriding question has significant implications for the negotiations to come: did Beijing or Washington flinch first?
Trump on Monday claimed victory, saying he had engineered a โtotal resetโ with China. Meanwhile Hu Xijin, the former editor of national Communist party tabloid the Global Times, said on social media that the deal was โa great victory for Chinaโ.
โThe US has chickened out,โ said one popular Chinese social media post of the deal.
Economists agreed that the US might have overplayed its hand by raising the tariffs too quickly and too high. โThe US blinked first,โ said Alicia Garcรญa-Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at French investment bank Natixis. โIt thought it could raise tariffs almost infinitely without being hurt, but that hasnโt been proven right.โ
The US and China had each argued that the other was more vulnerable to the tariffs. But the speed with which they unwound the levies in Geneva suggested that the trade war was inflicting severe pain on both sides, she added.
A hard decoupling of the worldโs two largest economies was threatening job losses for Chinese workers and higher inflation and empty shelves for American consumers. Meanwhile, Trump was having to deal with nervous markets in the US and the prospect of empty shelves at big retailers.
Craig Singleton of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a think-tank in Washington, said it was โstrikingโ how quickly the deal had emerged, suggesting that โboth sides were more economically boxed in than they let onโ.
While Beijing stood toe-to-toe with Washington in fighting Trumpโs tariffs, Chinese negotiators still have more work to do to level the playing field; the US still retains much higher tariffs on China than on any other country.
Capital Economics calculated that total US tariffs on Chinese goods would remain at about 40 per cent after the ceasefire while Chinese tariffs on the US would be about 25 per cent. Experts also warned it would be a hard road to secure any agreement that would be more lasting.
โThe US-China trade negotiations are going to be like a rollercoaster,โ said Scott Kennedy, a China expert at CSIS, a think-tank. โMarkets can breathe a temporary sigh of relief but weโre nowhere near out of the woods.โ

Ahead of the talks, Bessent had warned that the high level of tariffs was not sustainable and amounted to an effective embargo on US-China trade.
The ceasefire at least narrowed the gap sufficiently for Chinaโs extremely price competitive manufacturersย to remain in business in the US.
Alfredo Montufar-Helu, head of the China Center at The Conference Board think-tank in New York, said it would have been impossible for Chinese producers to offset the 145 per cent tariffs imposed by the US. โBut at 30 per cent, I think most Chinese imports into the US would regain their competitiveness.โ
Before the talks in Geneva, Bessent had said the two sides were unlikely to reach a broad economic and trade deal, saying they needed โto de-escalate before we can move forwardโ.
But on Monday, he struck an optimistic note, hinting that Washington might be looking for the type of โpurchase agreementsโ that characterised the initial phase of the US-China trade war during Trumpโs first term.ย
These involved Beijing agreeing to buy quantities of commodities, such as soyabeans, and US manufactured goods, but they were disrupted by the pandemic.ย โThere will also be a possibility of purchase agreements to pull what is our largest bilateral trade deficit into balance,โ Bessent said.
Bessent and Greer also sounded positive on the possibility of a deal with China to curb the trafficking of fentanyl precursors into the US.

โThe upside surprise for me from this weekend was the level of Chinese engagement on the fentanyl crisis,โ Bessent said.ย
He said the Chinese delegation included an official who had a โvery robust and highly detailed discussion with someone from the US national security teamโ.ย ย
For Beijing, a fentanyl deal could erase 20 percentage points of remaining tariffs imposed by Trump, placing China roughly on a level playing field with other countries exporting to the US.ย
China would still face sector-specific tariffs, such as Biden-era levies on electric vehicles. But other countries would also be subject to US tariffs in similar sectors.
Even with this respite, economists cautioned that the bilateral relationship remained troubled, with Trumpโs unpredictable policymaking expected to drive China to continue to diversify its exports markets and try to stimulate more domestic demand.ย
Chinese exporters would also probably use the 90-day window for the negotiation to frontload more exports to the US, which could lead to another surge in Chinaโs trade surplus with the country.
โA durable resolution remains challenging, given the complex bilateral relationship,โ said Robin Xing, economist at Morgan Stanley in a note.
With additional reporting by Wenjie Ding in Beijing


