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Global Trade Weekly — 2026-03-29

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Global Trade Weekly — 2026-03-29

Global Trade Weekly|March 29, 20265 min read9.1AI quality score — automatically evaluated based on accuracy, depth, and source quality
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China launched two formal trade investigations into U.S. practices this week — a retaliatory move ahead of a planned Trump–Xi summit in May — while the European Parliament advanced conditions for a potential EU-U.S. trade deal. Secondary theme: Canadian businesses continue to stall on investment decisions as uncertainty over any future U.S.-Canada trade arrangement deepens.

Global Trade Weekly — 2026-03-29


Top Stories


China Opens Trade Probes Into the United States

Beijing launched two formal investigations into U.S. trade practices this week, a tit-for-tat response to the Trump administration's ongoing tariff campaign. The move is widely seen as leverage-building ahead of a scheduled May meeting between President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Chinese officials have signaled the probes could lead to retaliatory measures if the two sides fail to reach an accommodation.

China-U.S. trade tensions headline the week
China-U.S. trade tensions headline the week

The investigations add a new layer of complexity to the already fraught U.S.-China trade relationship, which has seen tariffs escalate substantially since 2025. Markets are watching closely to see whether the May summit produces a de-escalation or a further hardening of positions.


EU Advances U.S. Trade Deal Framework; MEPs Set Conditions

The European Parliament this week voted to advance a framework for a potential EU-U.S. trade deal, clearing a significant procedural hurdle. However, MEPs attached conditions, insisting that any reduction in tariffs on U.S. goods must be tied to specific reciprocal concessions from Washington. The White House is also managing soaring energy costs related to geopolitical supply shocks in the Middle East, adding complexity to any negotiations.

The vote signals European willingness to negotiate but not capitulate — a distinction that will matter as formal talks take shape. For businesses on both sides of the Atlantic, the outcome of these negotiations could reshape supply chain strategies and pricing structures in key sectors including manufacturing and agriculture.


Canadian Businesses Stall as U.S. Trade Deal Jitters Persist

In Windsor, Ontario — one of Canada's most U.S.-dependent border cities — business investment has ground to a near halt amid persistent uncertainty over the future of the U.S.-Canada trade relationship. Windsor's economy, heavily tied to cross-border auto manufacturing and supply chains, reflects broader national unease.

![Windsor, Ontario feels the strain of U.S.-Canada trade uncertainty]( 0d3ed29d8aef667&height=1005&width=1920&quality=80&smart=true)

Businesses are reluctant to commit to capital expenditure, hiring, or new contracts while the terms of any future trade deal remain unclear. Economists warn that prolonged uncertainty itself acts as an economic drag, even before any new tariffs formally take effect.

reuters.com

reuters.com


Tariff & Sanctions Tracker

  • United States → China: Tariff rates on Chinese imports remain at elevated levels established under the Trump 2.0 tariff regime. The administration continues to pursue Section 301 trade investigations against 16 U.S. trading partners as the "next phase" of its global trade strategy. Effective: ongoing, with new investigations active.

  • China → United States (retaliatory): Beijing formally opened two trade investigations into U.S. practices this week (announced March 27, 2026), a move that could serve as the basis for new Chinese counter-tariffs if the May Trump-Xi summit does not produce an agreement. Effective: investigations launched March 27, 2026.

  • EU → United States (potential): The European Parliament advanced conditions this week for lowering tariffs on U.S. products, contingent on reciprocal U.S. concessions. No tariff changes are yet in effect; formal negotiations must still proceed. Status: conditional framework advanced, week of March 24–28, 2026.


By the Numbers

  • $700: Estimated average tax increase per U.S. household attributable to 2026 Trump tariffs, according to the Tax Foundation's running tracker — without a meaningful corresponding reduction in the U.S. trade deficit.

  • Tariff impact on U.S. economy: A Brookings Institution analysis published this week found that unprecedented tariff increases in 2025 have so far had only a small effect on the overall U.S. economy, with cost-sharing of import taxes occurring across supply chains among producers, importers, retailers, and consumers.

  • AI-related trade surge: A McKinsey Global Institute report cited this week found that AI-related trade "skyrocketed" during the tariff war period, confounding nearly every pre-tariff prediction about trade winners and losers. The report provides one of the most rigorous accountings of last year's trade disruption.


Regional Spotlight


RCEP's Growing Relevance Amid U.S.-China Trade Turmoil

As the U.S. pursues aggressive tariff strategies against multiple partners and China retaliates, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) is quietly gaining strategic weight in Asia-Pacific trade architecture. Intra-ASEAN trade grew by more than 7% in 2024 — recovering from a 2023 decline — and broader regional trade under the RCEP framework has strengthened.

RCEP member countries and regional trade bloc map
RCEP member countries and regional trade bloc map

The World Economic Forum projects that at current trajectory, RCEP has the potential to lift 27 million additional people to middle-class status by 2035. As Washington disrupts traditional trade relationships, RCEP members — including China, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and the ten ASEAN nations — are deepening economic integration outside the U.S. orbit.

Why it matters globally: The ongoing U.S.-China confrontation is accelerating a bifurcation of global trade into regional blocs. RCEP represents the largest such bloc by population and GDP. If U.S. tariff pressure persists without bilateral agreements, companies across manufacturing, tech hardware, and consumer goods will face mounting pressure to realign their supply chains within RCEP-friendly networks — a structural shift with decade-long implications.


What to Watch Next Week

  1. China's Trade Probe Findings (Ongoing — watch for April announcements): Beijing's two newly launched investigations into U.S. trade practices could yield preliminary findings within weeks. Any announcement of prospective Chinese countermeasures would escalate the bilateral standoff significantly ahead of the May Trump-Xi summit.

  2. EU-U.S. Trade Negotiations (Early April): Following this week's European Parliament vote advancing a conditional trade deal framework, watch for a formal response from Washington. The White House's willingness — or refusal — to engage with MEP-set conditions will determine whether talks gain traction or stall.

  3. U.S. Section 301 Investigation Updates: The Trump administration is running Section 301 tariff investigations against 16 trading partners. Preliminary findings or formal tariff announcements stemming from any of these investigations could drop in early April, with potentially broad market implications for affected sectors.

  4. Canada-U.S. Trade Talks (Ongoing): With Canadian businesses effectively paralyzed on investment decisions, pressure is mounting on Ottawa and Washington to clarify the future of their bilateral trade relationship. Any substantive communication — or pointed silence — from either capital next week will be closely watched by North American manufacturers and investors.

This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.

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