
China’s May exports grew just 4.8% year-on-year, the slowest pace in three months, customs data revealed Monday. That’s down from April’s 8.1% jump and below the 5% forecast by Reuters. Even with a temporary easing of U.S. tariffs in April, the world’s second-largest economy is feeling the heat—both at the docks and in its factories.
Imports fell sharply, plunging 3.4% from a year ago, far worse than April’s 0.2% drop. With both exports and imports losing steam, China’s trade surplus ballooned to $103.2 billion, up from $96.18 billion in April. But the headline numbers can’t hide the growing cracks beneath.

At home, Chinese factories are struggling. The Producer Price Index (PPI)—which tracks prices at the factory gate—fell 3.3% in May, marking its steepest drop in nearly two years. Consumer prices also dipped 0.1%, signaling that people are spending less. In simple terms: China’s making stuff, but the world’s not buying like it used to.
Trade Tensions + Deflation = Economic Headache
Even though Beijing and Washington paused most tariffs for 90 days in April, the damage was already done. Exporters had rushed shipments in March and April, with growth hitting 12.4% and 8.1% respectively, trying to beat the tariff clock. Now, that artificial boost is fading.
And while the headlines say “talks are resuming”—China and U.S. officials are meeting again in London—it feels like déjà vu. Rare earth tensions, Taiwan drama, and mutual distrust are still on the table. (Source: Reuters)
Beijing Tries to Cushion the Blow
In response, Beijing rolled out monetary support in May:
- Lowered benchmark lending rates
- A 500 billion yuan loan program aimed at elderly care and services
The goal? Prop up consumption and soften the export hit. But monetary Band-Aids don’t heal a global demand wound.
A Bigger Problem Than Tariffs?
The real worry isn’t just U.S. tariffs. It’s deflation. When prices fall and keep falling, people delay purchases, companies cut output, and economic momentum stalls. For a country like China—built on factories and exports—this is the economic equivalent of a flat tire on a race track.
Tariffs may grab headlines, but deflation is the slow-burn threat that could hurt China—and the world—far more. If China’s May exports are a warning, it’s that the global engine room is coughing again. And when China sneezes, the world feels it.
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