Top U.S. and Chinese officials wrapped up the first day of talks in Switzerland on Saturday aimed at defusing a trade war that threatens to hammer the global economy and planned to resume negotiations on Sunday, a source close to the discussions said.
Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng met for about eight hours with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Geneva in their first face-to-face meeting since the world's two largest economies heaped tariffs well above 100% on each other's goods.
Neither side made any statements about the substance of the discussions nor signaled any progress towards reducing crushing tariffs as meetings at the residence of Switzerland's ambassador to the U.N. concluded at about 8 p.m.
Bessent, Greer and He were meeting in Geneva after weeks of growing tensions prompted by U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff blitz starting in February and retaliation from Beijing that has brought nearly $600 billion in annual bilateral trade to a virtual standstill.
The trade dispute, combined with Trump's decision last month to impose duties on dozens of other countries, has disrupted supply chains, unsettled financial markets and stoked fears of a sharp global downturn.
The location of the talks in the Swiss diplomatic hub was never made public. However, witnesses saw both delegations returning after a lunch break to the gated U.N. ambassador's villa, which has its own private park overlooking Lake Geneva in the leafy suburb of Cologny.
Earlier, U.S. officials including Bessent and Greer smiled as they left their hotel on the way to the talks, wearing red ties and American flags on their lapels. Bessent declined to speak to reporters.
At the same time, Mercedes vans with tinted windows were seen leaving a hotel where the Chinese delegation was staying on the lakeside as runners preparing for a weekend marathon warmed up in the sunshine.
Washington is seeking to reduce its $295 billion goods trade deficit with Beijing and persuade China to renounce what the United States says is a mercantilist economic model and contribute more to global consumption, a shift that would require politically sensitive domestic reforms.
Beijing has pushed back against what it sees as external interference. It wants Washington to lower tariffs, clarify what it wants China to buy more of, and treat it as an equal on the world stage.
China's official Xinhua News Agency said in a commentary on Saturday that the United States' "reckless abuse of tariffs" had destabilized the global economic order, but added that the negotiations represented "a positive and necessary step to resolve disagreements and avert further escalation."
"Whether the road ahead involves negotiation or confrontation, one thing is clear: China's determination to safeguard its development interests is unshakable, and its stance on maintaining the global economic and trade order remains unwavering," Xinhua said
LOW EXPECTATIONS
With distrust running high, both sides have been keen not to appear weak, and economic analysts have low expectations of a breakthrough.
Trump said on Friday that an 80% tariff on Chinese goods "seems right", suggesting for the first time a specific alternative to the 145% levies he has imposed on Chinese imports.
He has suggested the discussions were initiated by China. Beijing said the U.S. requested the discussions and that China's policy of opposing U.S. tariffs had not changed.
China could be looking for the same 90-day waiver on tariffs that Washington has given other countries as negotiations take place, while any kind of tariff reduction and follow-up talks would be seen as positive by investors.
Swiss Economy Minister Guy Parmelin met both parties in Geneva on Friday and said the fact that the talks were taking place was already a success.
"If a road map can emerge and they decide to continue discussions, that will lower the tensions," he told reporters on Friday, saying talks could continue into Sunday or even Monday.
Switzerland helped to broker the meeting during recent visits by Swiss politicians to China and the United States.
China's He is also provisionally scheduled to meet the director-general of the World Trade Organization, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, during his stay, a spokesperson for the Geneva-based watchdog said.
She has welcomed the talks "as a positive and constructive step towards de-escalation", calling for sustained dialogue between the two top economies.
Since taking office in January, Trump has increased tariffs on Chinese imports to 145%, citing unfair trade practices and accusing Beijing of failing to curb the export of chemicals used to produce fentanyl, a lethal synthetic opioid.
China retaliated with 125% retaliatory tariffs, and said it would not bow to "imperialists" and bullies.
© Thomson Reuters 2025.
7 Comments
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elephant200
Never pay ransom to thieves, Donald Trump is a criminal of "International Extortions". His tariff policy is like a mass robbery and everyone must open their pocket, the safe at home and let him looting of whatever he wants. There is only one country demanding him backoff, is China !
bass4funk
Sorry, but that argument is full of the typical hyperbole and oversimplification of what all this means and the significance importance of these talks. You can disagree with Trump’s tariff policies, nothing wrong with that, and that’s healthy for a fair political debate—but calling them “international extortion” or comparing them to robbery ignores the fact that tariffs are a legitimate, legal tool used by every administration to negotiate trade terms and protect national interests, if you don’t like that, it’s ok, but the U.S. has every legal right to take action against what China has been doing to the U.S.. You might not like how Trump used them, but that doesn’t make it criminal under any circumstance, now China on the other hand….
The trade war with China was about far more than ego or aggression—it’s a response to years of complaints about intellectual property theft, unfair subsidies, and market manipulation. Even critics of Trump admit he wasn’t the first president to raise those issues—he was just the first to take an aggressively confrontational approach, whereas the last 4 Presidents didn’t. China opposing Trump’s strategy doesn’t make him wrong—it shows the pressure is real and that he’s serious and the Chinese know he’s serious. Global trade isn’t a popularity contest, and standing firm—even if it’s controversial—is not the same as criminality. If you want to criticize the policy, do it with facts, not loaded language and baseless accusations, not sure why liberals focus on the man, but not the problems and caused the man to be elected.
chatanista
May take a while but no dkubt they will reach a deal eventually.
Nifty
No percent sounds about right. And then take full credit for solving the problem.
HopeSpringsEternal
Great news, Trump put out a positive post on Truth Social on Sat, 're-setting' the trade relationship, meaning especially Chinese opening up their markets to US.
Clearly, China's economy in a serious tailspin, China's towns across the US reeling etc.
HopeSpringsEternal
Trump's trade approach is working with China, because he's convincing so many other countries to copy US and pursue re-shoring of manufacturing and supply chains.
Nobody likes or trusts China, and everyone remembers Covid, the medical supply chain nightmare and their ongoing historical military buildup.
Seems, besides US citizens, India's the biggest direct beneficiary of DJ Trump, along with the Middle East.
HopeSpringsEternal
China's getting squeezed, as the clock is ticking and their factory floors are getting very quiet!