When Donald Trump last visited China for a major trade negotiation in 2017, the world was a different place. The then-US president was hailed as a master dealmaker, yet his tactics of bluster and brinkmanship met a China that was still finding its feet on the global stage. Fast forward to 2025, and the tables have turned. The Chinese delegation he faces now is not the same deferential counterpart he remembers. This is a China that has weathered trade wars, pandemic isolation, and a tech crackdown. It is more self-assured, more strategically patient, and far less willing to bend.
On the streets of Beijing, where I have been observing the mood, there is a quiet shift. The usual bustling markets are more subdued, but not from fear. The people I speak with echo a sense of national pride that was less vocal a decade ago. 'We have learned to stand on our own,' one retiree told me, sipping tea in a hutong café. 'Trump thinks he can strong-arm us, but we have our own way.' This is the new normal: a China that no longer sees the US as an indispensable partner but as a rival to be managed.
The trade mission itself is unfolding behind closed doors, but the symbolic gestures speak volumes. The Chinese reception for Trump has been correct but cool. No red carpets, no grand banquets. Instead, there are terse statements and firm demands. The US delegation, I am told, is facing a wall of data and leverage. Chinese officials come armed with statistics on their domestic market size, their belt-and-road successes, and their growing technological independence. They are not here to make deals; they are here to rebalance terms.
For the average person in Shanghai or Shenzhen, the impact of this shift is tangible. A local tech entrepreneur explained to me that his startup no longer relies on US chips or software licences. 'We have alternatives now. Not perfect, but enough to survive a decoupling.' This resilience is the invisible backbone of China's negotiation stance. The Trump camp, used to exploiting vulnerabilities, finds little purchase.
There is also a social psychology at play. The Chinese public, once eager for American approval, has turned inward. Nationalistic narratives dominate social media, and any concession to the US is seen as weakness. The government knows this. It cannot afford to be seen as capitulating, especially before a domestic audience that has been told for years that China's time has come.
Will Trump succeed in securing the trade concessions he seeks? If the past decade is any guide, the answer is likely no. The era of easy wins is over. This is a China that has learned to say no, not out of defiance but out of strategic necessity. The cultural shift is complete: the student has become the master, and the master is no longer in the mood to bargain.








