China’s Manufacturing Resilience: The Unseen Engine in Global Trade Dynamics
The Manufacturing Backbone in Trade Negotiations As trade tensions between the United States and China escalate, Beijing is leveraging its…
The Manufacturing Backbone in Trade Negotiations As trade tensions between the United States and China escalate, Beijing is leveraging its…
China’s economic expansion has moderated to its slowest rate in four quarters, with GDP growth reaching 4.8% year-on-year. The cooling momentum comes amid ongoing trade tensions and a prolonged property sector adjustment, adding complexity to policymakers’ efforts to rebalance the economy toward domestic consumption.
China’s economic expansion reportedly slowed to its most moderate pace in a year during the third quarter, with the gross domestic product growing 4.8% year-on-year according to official data. This represents a deceleration from the 5.2% growth recorded in the previous quarter, sources indicate, as the world’s second-largest economy navigates multiple headwinds including trade tensions and property market adjustments.
Economic Growth Shows Measured Slowdown China’s economic expansion is showing clear signs of moderation as third-quarter data reveals a measured…
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent criticizes China’s rare earth export controls as trade tensions escalate. Both nations implement retaliatory shipping fees while rare earth stocks decline. Experts analyze potential economic consequences.
Rare earth stocks are declining significantly as persistent trade tensions between the United States and China intensify over export controls, potential tariffs, and retaliatory shipping fees. The market reaction comes as both economic superpowers implement measures affecting rare earth minerals crucial for technology and defense applications, with investors concerned about prolonged trade disruption and supply chain instability.