The U.S.-China tech rivalry has escalated to a new level this April 2025 with U.S. tariffs becoming a targeted trade tool. The Trump administration unleashed waves of tariffson Chinese goods: on March 4, a 10% tariff on all imports was imposed on top of raising tariffs from 10% to 20% on many Chinese electronics, machinery and industrial components; on April 2, ending of de minimis eligibility for China and Hong Kong (from May 2) and the “reciprocal tariffs” on key critical sectors imposed an additional 34%; and on April 8, an additional 50% tariff on semiconductors, EVs, and robotics was announced.
There also continues to be tariff escalations, clarifications and exemptions like in cases where final products have more than 20% of U.S. produced components. Chinese imports can be as high as 245% on needles and syringes or as low as zero for children’s books. Imported smartphones, computers and electronics appear to be currently granted a partial tariff reprieve and may only be subject to the March tariffs of 20%. These adjustments will probably continue as the impacts are felt by American consumers and the global markets.
Some view these measures as a means to derail China’s technological ascendancy by inflating costs, disrupting supply chains, and isolating it from global markets. Beijing’s counterstrategy, a mix of aggressive fiscal stimulus packages, supply chain resilience frameworks, and enforced technology self-reliance, suggests a calculated pivot to absorb short-term shocks while securing long-term growth.
The question then is: can China’s 2025 policy playbook neutralize U.S. tariffs’ impacts and sustain its ICT ambitions?
U.S. Tariffs’ Impact on China’s ICT Sector
IDC’s 2025 projections reveal a sector under strain but adapting. Our baseline scenario, with 20% tariffs in place, China’s ICT spending is expected to grow at 9.1% driven by domestic AI, cloud, and industrial software demand. With 50% tariffs, IDC’s downside scenario will slow down growth to 5.7%, with consumer electronics (PCs, smartphones) declining 7.6% due to inflated import duty. An optimistic scenario, with tariffs rolled back, sees China’s ICT spending growth at 9.9%, fueled by pent-up innovation and continued existing global partnerships.
Contributing to China’s ICT spending in 2025 are the key trends we are seeing in software/cloud services (+10 to 16% YoY), largely due to organizations prioritization of digital efficiency, as well as in industrial technologies such as AI, IoT, automation, which remains resilient due to state subsidies. While the consumer hardware export market is expected to falter (e.g., iPhone costs rose 25% post-April hikes), domestic demand is expected to remain steady with government subsidies.
China’s Growing Tech Independence
There is increased emphasis on China’s “dual circulation” strategy that was originally a response to the U.S. tariffs and other sanctions introduced between 2018 and 2020. The strategy seeks to prioritize domestic consumption and non-western international trade to gain greater self-reliance and resilience. This strategy can be seen at work in the likes of DeepSeek whose open-source models are now powering a significant portion of Chinese Cloud services including Tencent, Alibaba and many more. Huawei’s Ascend AI chips also increased their share of AI-accelerator chips to 27% in 2024 and is expected to reach 40% by the end of 2025.
Companies’ Response: Increased Agility to Respond to Tariff Chaos
Agility is the name of the game amid all this tariff chaos. Chinese tech giants are restructuring their supply chains by accelerating offshoring to Southeast Asia, shifting their assembly lines to sidestep tariffs. They are also diversifying their markets by pivoting to emerging markets, such as expanding electric vehicle and cloud service exports to tariff-immune regions. Some companies are also innovating operations by adopting leaner strategies like AI-powered factories to cut waste or using direct shipping tech from e-commerce platforms to bypass tariffs.
China’s 5-Point Plan: A Phase-Matched Counterattack
In response to each wave of tariffs, a 5-point plan helped blunt immediate impacts while increasing long-term leverage:
1. Domestic Demand Boost via “Consumer Upgrade Action” Plan
With the aim of boosting domestic demand and spurring economic growth, the Chinese government has put in place subsidies and trade-in programs for eligible consumer goods. For smartphones, tablets, and smartwatches, the government subsidy is up to 15% of product price, capped at ¥500/item. This trade-in program is expanded in 2025 to apply to other electronics, EVs and home appliances as well, as illustrated in the following chart:

The subsidies also target rural/low-tier cities for 5G adoption, smart home devices, and rural e-commerce logistics. There are also plans to stabilize consumer confidence through stock/real estate market reforms and wage growth policies.
The effect of these subsidies can be seen in the latest sales-out PC shipments with flat growth of 1% in 1Q 2025 compared to -16% in 1Q 2024.
2. Increased Funding for Emerging Tech
China’s $138B Innovation Fund aims to boost homegrown tech innovation and reduce foreign reliance amid escalating U.S. tariffs. It focuses on discovering and increasing “original technological breakthroughs” in early-stage startups in AI, quantum computing, hydrogen energy, biomanufacturing, and 6G technology. Funding is a combination of state capital and private/local government long-term (over 20 years) investments in R&D infrastructure and tech-to-product pipelines.
The innovation fund also involves industry stakeholders such as the MIIT (Ministry of Industry and Information Technology), academia, enterprises (to enhance smart manufacturing), and foreign collaborators in the telecom/robotics sectors. The program also aims to cultivate and highlight domestic STEM talent to offset global supply chain risks, with existing success stories like DeepSeek.
3. China’s “Five Financial Priorities” Guidelines
These guidelines provide financial support to organizations providing technology, green finance, digitalization, financial inclusion, and pension products and services. It uses technology investments to bolster innovation and self-reliance. Key measures include: comprehensive financing for national tech projects and SMEs via equity, debt, and insurance tools; capital market focus prioritizing early-stage investments in emerging technology through multi-layered markets; risk mitigation mechanisms to disperse R&D risks and expand venture capital/angel funding; and patient capital to cultivate long-term investments that nurture tech leaders, unicorns, and specialized SMEs. This framework integrates financial resources to advance China’s tech competitiveness and industrial upgrades.
4. Belt and Road 2.0: Decoupling from the U.S. via Global Partnerships
“Belt and Road 2.0” aims to reduce reliance on the U.S. by expanding partnerships and promoting diversification. Strategies include upgrading multilateral mechanisms (e.g., proposed creation of a global banking infrastructure), prioritizing green tech and digital infrastructure (e.g., Green Silk Road projects), and deepening cooperation with Global South nations (e.g., Indonesia, Malaysia). It counters U.S. decoupling attempts by fostering inclusive, non-conditional collaboration and integration with third-party markets. These initiatives also emphasize resilience through regional alliances and tech self-sufficiency.
5. Private Enterprise Symposium 2025
The symposium was used to develop joint approaches between the public and private sector to offset U.S. tariffs. DeepSeek’s NLP breakthroughs and Unitree’s humanoid robots were highlighted as successful examples that have reduced reliance on foreign tech. At the symposium, China’s President Xi Jinping pledged to dismantle market barriers, ensure fair access to resources, and expedite laws protecting private enterprises.
Conclusion
Considering ongoing trade tensions, both U.S. and Chinese IT companies must adapt quickly to shifting geopolitical dynamics. Agility and scenario planning will be critical. Companies need to develop flexible strategies and implement tools that assess the potential impacts of tariff changes and geopolitical shifts. Regular cross-functional reviews can help minimize risks and ensure swift responses to market changes.
Furthermore, customer-centric innovation will drive market success. Companies must prioritize local market needs through targeted research, ensuring that their products align with specific regional demands such as those seen in healthcare, education, or government sectors. This approach is vital as trade restrictions may limit access to certain markets, but the demand for innovation will remain constant.
Strategic partnerships and alliances are also crucial for navigating challenges. U.S. and Chinese companies should collaborate with local tech providers to better understand market regulations and explore joint ventures to mitigate tariff impacts.
As the demand for smart home appliances grows, especially with trade-in programs, vast amounts of consumer data will fuel the expansion of B2C AI use cases in China. Additionally, China’s focus on infrastructure projects and domestic LLM development marks a new phase in technological independence, where reliance on U.S. technologies may decrease.
By focusing on flexibility, innovation, and strategic partnerships, both sides can thrive despite current challenges.
Learn more how you can navigate China’s geopolitical storms with trusted intelligence, read this complimentary IDC Market Note excerpt. Alternatively, you can book a meeting with an IDC analyst for a consultation by submitting this form.