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Xi’s export machine gets lift from U.S. move to strongarm allies

Jan. 20, 2026, 9:48 a.m. ET

As Xi Jinping battles unprecedented deflation and shrinking investment, he’s betting that China can sell more and more goods to the world to drive growth. To that end, Donald Trump’s threats against key U.S. allies are coming at a good time.

Shipping containers labeled with brands including FESCO, Yang Ming, WAN HAI and K Line are stacked in front of docked vessels and gantry cranes at the Yantian International Container Terminal, with a construction area in the foreground, on April 12, 2025, in Shenzhen, China. U.S. President Donald Trump's threats against European allies are giving China some breathing room on trade.

China’s world-beating export juggernaut played a key role in helping Xi hit his 5% growth target for 2025, accounting for the largest share of expansion since 1997, according to data published Monday. That papered over deep cracks in the domestic consumer economy: The country’s property market remains moribund, deflation marked its longest slump since the 1970s and investment posted its first-ever annual decline.

While Trump’s tariffs prompted China to find other markets for its goods, spurring some countries like Mexico to put new duties on certain Chinese products, the U.S. leader’s latest threats against Europe are providing some breathing space for Xi. Last week, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney signed a deal with China that rolled back electric vehicle tariffs and talked about moving close to Beijing in the “new world order.”

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