China correspondent
A hiss and puff of compressed air shapes the sleek leather-based, bringing to life an all-American cowboy boot in a manufacturing facility on China’s japanese coast.
Then comes one other one because the meeting line continues, the sounds of stitching, stitching, slicing and soldering echoing off the excessive ceilings.
“We used to promote round one million pairs of shoes a yr,” says the 45-year-old gross sales supervisor, Mr Peng, who didn’t want to reveal his first title.
That’s, till Donald Trump got here alongside.
A slew of tariffs in his first presidential time period triggered a commerce conflict between the world’s two largest economies. Six years on, Chinese language companies are bracing themselves for a sequel now that he’s again within the White Home.
“What path ought to we take sooner or later?” Mr Peng asks, unsure of what Trump 2.0 means for him, his colleagues – and China.
A battle looms
For Western markets which can be more and more cautious of Beijing’s ambitions, commerce has develop into a strong bargaining chip – particularly as a sluggish Chinese language economic system depends ever extra on exports. Trump returned on a marketing campaign promise that included crushing tariffs in opposition to Chinese language-made items, and has since threatened a ten% levy that’s anticipated to take impact on 1 February.
He has additionally ordered a assessment of US-China commerce – which buys Beijing time and Washington, negotiating room. And for now, harsher rhetoric (and better tariffs) appears to be directed in opposition to US allies reminiscent of Canada and Mexico.
Trump could have pressed pause on the looming battle with Beijing. However many imagine it is nonetheless coming. It is arduous to seek out a precise determine on what number of companies are fleeing China, however main companies reminiscent of Nike, Adidas and Puma have already relocated to Vietnam. Chinese language companies too have been transferring, reshaping provide chains, though Beijing stays a key participant.
Mr Peng says his boss, who owns the manufacturing facility, has thought of transferring manufacturing to South East Asia, together with lots of their rivals.
It will save the agency, however they might lose their workforce. A lot of the employees are from the close by metropolis of Nantong and have labored right here for greater than 20 years.
Mr Peng, whose spouse died when their son was younger, says the manufacturing facility has been his household: “Our boss is decided to not abandon these workers.”

He’s conscious of the geopolitics at play, however he says he and his employees are simply making an attempt to make a residing. They’re nonetheless reeling from the affect of 2019, when a fourth spherical of Trump tariffs – 15% – hit Chinese language-made shopper items, reminiscent of garments and sneakers.
Orders have since dwindled and employees numbers, as soon as greater than 500, have dropped to only over 200. The proof is within the empty work stations, as Mr Peng exhibits us round.
Throughout him, employees are slicing the leather-based into the precise form at hand it to the machinist. They should be exact as a result of errors will smash the costly leather-based, most of which has been imported from the US.
The manufacturing facility is making an attempt to maintain prices low as a few of their American patrons are already contemplating transferring enterprise away from China and the specter of tariffs.
However that may imply dropping expert employees: it will possibly take as much as per week to make one pair of shoes, from flattening the leather-based to giving the completed boots a ultimate polish and packing them for export.
That is what turned China into the world’s high producer – labour-intensive manufacturing which can also be low-cost when it is scaled up and supported by an unrivalled provide chain. And this has been years within the making.
“It was as soon as a relentless cycle of inspecting items and transport them out – I felt fulfilled,” says Mr Peng, who has labored right here since 2015. “However orders have decreased, which makes me really feel fairly misplaced and anxious.”
As soon as crafted to beat the Wild West, these cowboy boots have been made right here for greater than a decade. And this can be a acquainted story within the south of Jiangsu province, a producing hub alongside the Yangtze River that produces nearly the whole lot, from textiles to electrical automobiles.

These are among the many lots of of billions of {dollars} price of products that China ships to america yearly – a quantity that steadily ballooned as Washington grew to become its largest buying and selling associate.
That standing slipped beneath Trump. However it was not restored beneath his successor Joe Biden, who stored most Trump-era tariffs in place, as ties with Beijing frayed.
In truth, the European Union too has imposed tariffs on electrical car imports, accusing China of creating an excessive amount of, typically with the assist of state subsidies. Trump has echoed this – that China’s “unfair” commerce practices drawback overseas comeptitors.
Beijing sees such rhetoric as Western makes an attempt to stifle its progress, and it has repeatedly warned Washington that there can be no winners in a commerce conflict. However it has additionally mentioned it is prepared to speak and “correctly deal with variations”.
And President Trump, who has described tariffs as his “one large energy” over China, definitely desires to speak.
It is unclear as but what he would possibly need in return. Throughout Trump’s honeymoon interval with China in his first time period he got here to Beijing to ask for Xi’s assist in assembly North Korea’s chief Kim Jong Un. This time it’s believed he would possibly want Xi’s assist to make a take care of Russian President Vladimir Putin to finish the conflict in Ukraine. He just lately mentioned that China had “a substantial amount of energy over that scenario”.
The specter of a ten% tariff is pushed by the assumption that China is “sending fentanyl to Mexico and Canada”. So he might demand that it do extra to finish that stream.
Or, given he welcomed a bidding conflict over TikTok, he could wish to negotiate its possession – or the prized know-how that powers the app – as a result of Beijing would want to comply with any such sale.

Regardless of the deal could also be, it might assist reset US-China ties. Nevertheless, the absence of 1 might abruptly finish the prospect of a second honeymoon, establishing Trump and Xi for a much more confrontational relationship.
Already enterprise sentiment is nervous: an annual survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in China confirmed simply over half of them have been involved concerning the US-China relationship deteriorating additional.
Trump’s seemingly softer stance on China gives gives some reduction. However his hope remains to be that the specter of tariffs will assist drive patrons away from China and transfer manufacturing again to the US.
Some Chinese language companies are certainly on the transfer – however to not America.
Shifting store
An hour exterior Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh, businessman Huang Zhaodong has constructed a brand new manufacturing facility to cater to a flood of orders from US giants Walmart and Costco.
That is his second manufacturing facility in Cambodia, and collectively they produce half one million clothes a month, from shirts to underwear. Hangers carrying cotton trousers roll previous us on an automatic line, transferring from one station to the subsequent because the elastic waist is inserted and hemlines are completed.

Now, when potential US prospects lob the primary query, which he has come to anticipate – the place is he primarily based – Mr Huang has the precise reply. Not in China.
“Within the case of some Chinese language companies, their prospects have advised them: ‘If you happen to do not transfer manufacturing abroad, I will cancel your orders’.”
The tariffs elevate robust decisions for suppliers and retailers, however it’s not all the time clear who will bear the brunt of the price. Generally it is going to be the shopper, Mr Huang says.
“Take Walmart for example. I promote them garments at $5, however they normally mark it up 3.5 occasions. If the price will increase attributable to increased tariffs, the worth I promote to them would possibly rise to $6. In the event that they mark it up by 3.5 occasions, the retail worth would enhance.”
However normally, he says, it’s the provider. If his manufacturing line was in China, he estimates an additional 10% tariff might take an additional $800,000 (£644,000) from his earnings.
“That is greater than what I make as revenue. It is enormous and we won’t afford it. If you happen to’re making garments in China beneath such tariff situations, it is unsustainable,” he says.
Present US tariffs on Chinese language items fluctuate from 100% on electrical automobiles to 25% on metal and aluminium. Till now, a number of top-selling objects have been exempt, together with electronics, reminiscent of TVs and iPhones.
However the 10% blanket tariff Trump is proposing might have an effect on the worth of the whole lot that’s made in China and exported to the US. That applies to a number of issues – from toys and tea cups to laptops.

Mr Huang says this may encourage extra factories to maneuver elsewhere. A number of new workshops have sprung up round him and Chinese language firms from textile manufacturing heartlands reminiscent of Shandong, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Guangdong are transferring in to make winter jackets and woollen clothes.
Round 90% of clothes factories in Cambodia are actually Chinese language-run or Chinese language-owned, in keeping with a report by perception and evaluation group Analysis and Markets.
Half of the nation’s overseas funding flows from China. Seventy % of roads and bridges have been constructed utilizing loans Beijing disbursed, in keeping with Chinese language state media.
Most of the indicators on eating places and outlets are in Chinese language in addition to Khmer, the native language. There’s even a hoop street named Xi Jinping Boulevard in honour of the Chinese language president.
Cambodia isn’t a lone recipient. China has invested closely in numerous components of the world beneath President Xi’s Belt and Highway Initiative – a commerce and infrastructure challenge that additionally will increase Beijing’s affect.
Which means China has decisions.
Chinese language state media claims that greater than half of China’s imports and exports now come from Belt and Highway nations, most of them in South East Asia.

This has not occurred in a single day, says Kenny Yao from AlixPartners, who advises Chinese language companies on easy methods to take care of tariffs.
Throughout Trump’s first time period, many Chinese language companies doubted his tariff menace, he advised the ORIONEWS. Now they ask if he’ll comply with the availability chain and slap tariffs on different nations.
Simply in case he does, Mr Yao says, it could be clever for Chinese language companies to look additional afield: “For instance, Africa or Latin America. That is harder, however it’s good to have a look at areas you haven’t explored earlier than.”
As America pledges to take care of itself first, Beijing is doing its greatest to look a secure enterprise associate, and there’s some proof it’s working.
China has edged previous the US to develop into the prevailing selection for nations in South East Asia, in keeping with a survey by the Iseas Yusof-Ishak suppose tank in Singapore.
Though manufacturing has moved overseas, cash nonetheless flows to China – 60% of the supplies being made into garments at Mr Huang’s factories in Phnom Penh come from China.
And exports are thriving, with Beijing investing extra closely in high-end manufacturing, from photo voltaic panels to synthetic intelligence. Final yr’s commerce surplus with the world – on the again of a virtually 6% year-on-year soar in exports – was a document $992bn.
Nonetheless, Chinese language companies – in Jiangsu and Phnom Penh – are getting ready themselves for an unsure spell, if not a turbulent one.
Mr Peng hopes the US and China can have an “amicable and calm” dialogue to maintain the tariffs “inside an inexpensive vary” and keep away from a commerce conflict.
“People nonetheless must buy these merchandise,” he mentioned, earlier than driving off to fulfill new prospects.