The China-U.S. economic and trade relationship is the result of economic laws at work, exhibiting strong endogenous momentum. Countries achieve their own value and meet each other's needs through commodity exchanges based on comparative advantages, realizing common development. This is a fundamental principle of international trade relations. Since the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and the U.S., bilateral trade volume has surged from less than 2.5 billion USD in 1979 to nearly 688.3 billion USD in 2024. The significant growth in China-U.S. bilateral trade is due to the strong complementarity in natural endowments, human resources, markets, capital, technology, and other fields, forming a deeply intertwined economic and trade relationship. There is fundamentally no basis for the U.S. claim that trade with China puts the U.S. at a disadvantage.