Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Economic Coercion”
The $1.2 Trillion Surplus: China's Export Machine as Strategic Instrument
China’s global trade surplus reached $1.2 trillion in 2025, a figure that sits outside the normal range of peacetime trade imbalances and into territory the IMF has characterized as destabilizing for the global economy. Total goods trade crossed $6.36 trillion, with exports rising 6.1% year over year even as PRC exports to the United States fell 20%—a structural redirection, not a contraction. Beijing found other buyers.
The composition of the export surge is strategically significant. Exports of wind turbines rose 49%. Industrial robots rose 49%. EV batteries climbed 26%. Machinery and tools gained 20%. These are not consumer goods traded for household income. They are the capital equipment and energy infrastructure of other countries’ industrial bases. China is not merely selling products; it is inserting itself into the productive capacity of economies that will, in a crisis, need to decide whether their supply chain dependency on China is a reason to stay neutral.