How China used Vietnam to evade higher U.S. tariffs

How China used Vietnam to evade higher U.S. tariffs


The threat of rising tariff rates on U.S. imports could hobble the economic trajectory of countries such as Vietnam. 

Foreign direct investment in Vietnam has increased in recent years as firms search for ways to manage risks stemming from production in China. Vietnam has received approximately $18.5 billion in net foreign direct investment, according to World Bank records that go back to 1970.  

President Donald Trump’s 46% “reciprocal” tariff rate on goods imported into the U.S. from Vietnam briefly went into effect April 9. Later that day, Trump reset tariff rates on products from countries such as Vietnam to 10%. Countries subject to higher tariffs have less than 90 days to negotiate better trade terms with the White House.

“Vietnam is highly vulnerable,” said Tuan Chu, an associate program manager at RMIT University Vietnam. 

Vietnam’s potentially heightened tariff rates are based, in part, on its U.S. trade surplus, according to Cullen Hendrix, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. Vietnam’s trade surplus was roughly $123.5 billion in 2024 and $39.5 billion in 2018, according to the Census Bureau.

A portion of Vietnam’s rising exports to the U.S. may be Chinese products that were rerouted to evade higher tariff rates. Evidence of this comes from trade data collected after 2018, as a U.S.-China trade war escalated, according to a research paper from Harvard Business School. 

Edmund Malesky, a Duke University professor of political science and one of the authors of the Harvard paper, estimates that 84% of Vietnam’s increase in manufacturing activity was value-added production. “But there’s a smaller part, maybe 16%, depending on how you measure it, which is rerouting, which became a concern for the United States,” Malesky said.

Firms may alter their international supply chains if higher tariff rates on U.S. imports come to pass. 

“This is kind of part of a game of global whack-a-mole,” Hendrix said. 

Watch the video to learn how China may use countries such as Vietnam as a side door to trade with the U.S. 



Source

NFL approves the sale of a stake in the Chicago Bears in a deal that values the team at a league record of .9 billion, sources say
World

NFL approves the sale of a stake in the Chicago Bears in a deal that values the team at a league record of $8.9 billion, sources say

Tremaine Edmunds #49 of the Chicago Bears celebrates with teammates after making an interception during the second half against the Dallas Cowboys on September 21, 2025 at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois. Melissa Tamez | Icon Sportswire | Getty Images The National Football League’s finance committee has approved the sale of 2.35% of the Chicago […]

Read More
Ukrainian drones stage new attack on major Russian petrochemical complex
World

Ukrainian drones stage new attack on major Russian petrochemical complex

Ukrainian Army soldiers prepare LELEKA 100 military intelligence drone for flight in the direction of Chasiv Yar, Donetsk Oblast in Ukraine, June 10, 2024. Jose Colon | Anadolu | Getty Images Ukrainian drones attacked one of Russia’s largest petrochemical complexes, Salavat in the southern Bashkortostan region, for the second time in less than a week, […]

Read More
Microsoft adds Anthropic AI model to Copilot assistant, diversifying from OpenAI
World

Microsoft adds Anthropic AI model to Copilot assistant, diversifying from OpenAI

Microsoft is the lead investor in OpenAI and has long been the artificial intelligence startup’s key cloud partner. But in the latest sign that AI relationships are getting complicated, Microsoft is beginning to use more technology from OpenAI rival Anthropic. The software giant said Wednesday that it’s starting to draw on an AI model from […]

Read More