How China plans to dominate global trade long after Trump leaves office


China's Strategy to Dominate Global Trade Beyond the Trump Era

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II & GS-III


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2001 China joins WTO; begins integrating into rules-based multilateral trade order.
2005–2015 Signs bilateral FTAs with ASEAN, Chile, Pakistan, Singapore, Australia, South Korea, Switzerland.
2017 State-backed Chinese scholars begin systematically studying U.S. trade containment strategies post-Trump's first election; policy blueprint takes shape. [S1]
2020 RCEP signed (15 Asia-Pacific nations, including China); enters force Jan 2022. [S4]
Sept 2021 China formally applies to join CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership). [S5]
2025 Trump's second-term tariff escalation accelerates China's FTA diplomacy with EU, GCC, Canada, ASEAN sub-states. [S1]
Feb 2026 Reuters investigation reveals 20-FTA sprint as a coordinated geopolitical countermove. [S1]

Predecessors/Related Initiatives: - Belt and Road Initiative (BRI, 2013): Infrastructure connectivity as precursor to trade embedding. - Made in China 2025 (2015): Industrial upgrade to dominate high-value global supply chains. - Dual Circulation Strategy (2020): Reduce dependence on export-led growth while keeping manufacturing globally indispensable.


4. Core Static Facts

China's Trade Architecture

Key Terminological Distinctions

Term Meaning
FTA Free Trade Agreement — eliminates/reduces tariffs on goods/services between parties
RCEP Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership — Asia-Pacific mega-FTA in force since Jan 2022
CPTPP Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership — 11-nation pact; China is aspirant member
Dual Circulation China's domestic + export strategy to reduce U.S. leverage while maintaining global supply-chain centrality
Trade Surplus China's persistent export > import balance; identified as a key complicating factor in FTA negotiations [S1]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic (India-Specific)

Legal / Institutional

Historical

Administrative / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. China's economy is valued at approximately $19 trillion (as of 2025–26 analysis). [S1]
  2. China is simultaneously pursuing approximately 20 Free Trade Agreements to counter U.S. tariff pressure. [S1]
  3. China formally applied to join CPTPP on 16 September 2021. [S5]
  4. RCEP is the world's largest trade bloc by GDP and population; China is a founding member; it entered into force on 1 January 2022. [S4]
  5. A Reuters review of 100 Chinese-language articles by state-backed trade scholars written since 2017 revealed China's containment-reversal blueprint. [S1]
  6. The three major economic blocs China is targeting for FTA embedding are: EU, Gulf States (GCC), and CPTPP. [S1]
  7. China's China–Cambodia FTA and China–Nicaragua FTA were reviewed by WTO members in March 2025. [S2]
  8. China's trade surplus (persistent excess of exports over imports) is identified as the single biggest complication in its FTA negotiations with partners. [S1]
  9. WTO Article XXIV is the legal framework that permits FTAs among WTO members, provided they cover "substantially all trade." [S2]
  10. India withdrew from RCEP negotiations in November 2019, leaving it outside both RCEP and CPTPP — the two dominant Asia-Pacific trade frameworks. [S4]
  11. China's Dual Circulation Strategy (announced 2020) aims to reduce dependence on U.S.-controlled supply chains while retaining global manufacturing indispensability.
  12. The WTO Global Trade Outlook and Statistics (April 2025) identified geopolitical fragmentation as the primary risk to global trade growth. [S3]
  13. China's FTA strategy is conceptually linked to the Belt and Road Initiative (2013) as a layered approach — first infrastructure, then trade embedding.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-II: International Relations — Bilateral, Regional, Global groupings and agreements; Effect of policies of foreign countries on India's interests. - GS-III: Indian Economy — Effects of globalisation on the Indian economy; Trade and Balance of Payments.

Specific Syllabus Headings: - "Important International Institutions, Agencies and Fora — their structure, mandate." - "Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests." - "Trade and Balance of Payments; globalisation."

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "China's strategy to embed itself in global trade blocs represents a structural challenge to both U.S. hegemony and India's trade interests. Critically analyse." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "In the context of rising tariff barriers and geopolitical fragmentation, evaluate the significance of Free Trade Agreements as instruments of strategic autonomy for large developing economies." (GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "India's decision to stay out of RCEP now faces a compounded challenge as China accelerates its CPTPP bid. Assess the implications for India's trade and industrial policy." (GS-II/III, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership) World's largest trade bloc; China's anchor; India's exclusion is the direct strategic backdrop.
CPTPP (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership) China's attempted accession is the centrepiece of its trade-embedding strategy.
WTO Reform & Appellate Body Crisis China uses WTO architecture for FTA legitimacy, even as WTO dispute settlement is paralysed.
Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) Infrastructure investment strategy that precedes and enables China's trade-embedding.
India's FTA Strategy (UAE, Australia, UK, EU negotiations) Direct comparative — India's own FTA push as a competitive response to China's network.
U.S.–China Trade War & Tariff Escalation The direct trigger event; understanding tariff waves since 2018 is essential context.
Made in China 2025 / Dual Circulation Strategy Industrial and economic doctrines underlying China's trade confidence.
India's trade deficit with China Direct economic consequence; tests in GS-III on BoP and trade policy.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. RCEP ≠ CPTPP: Aspirants confuse these two. RCEP is in force and China is a member. CPTPP is a separate pact; China is only an applicant (since Sept 2021), not yet a member.
  2. India in RCEP: India is NOT a member of RCEP — it withdrew in November 2019 citing trade deficit concerns with China. Do not write India as a signatory.
  3. CPTPP ≠ TPP: The original TPP collapsed when the U.S. withdrew in 2017. CPTPP is the successor pact of 11 remaining nations, excluding the U.S. (the U.S. has not rejoined).
  4. China's FTA count: The ~20 FTAs figure refers to agreements being pursued/accelerated, not concluded — do not state China has signed 20 new FTAs.
  5. Confusing "trade surplus" as a strength in FTA talks: China's large surplus is actually a diplomatic liability — partner nations resist FTAs with China fearing cheap imports will flood their markets; it complicates, not facilitates, deal-making. [S1]

11. Sources


Note prepared for UPSC 2026–27 cycle. Cross-verify dynamic figures (FTA counts, trade surplus numbers) against the latest MEA/WTO updates closer to the examination.