A top Chinese economic official said Beijing was on the "right side of history" in its gruelling trade war with the United States.
Since returning to the White House in January, US President Donald Trump has imposed 10% tariffs on most US trading partners and a separate 145% levy on many products from China.
Beijing has responded with 125% tariffs of its own on US goods.
Speaking in Beijing at a news conference at which officials vowed greater steps to shield China's flagging economy from the impact of the standoff, senior economic planner Zhao Chenxin said Beijing was "on the right side of history".
"We firmly believe that if you are against the world and the truth, you will only isolate yourselves," Mr Zhao said.
"Only by travelling with the world and with morality can we win the future," he added.
The United States, he said, "play cards out of thin air, bully and go back on their word", condemning Washington's "unilateralism and bullying".
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent defended Mr Trump's tumultuous tariff policy - which has sent shivers through markets - as a way of creating "strategic uncertainty" that gives Washington the upper hand.
When asked about Mr Bessent's comments, Beijing said that the US should approach dialogue with China in a "fair, respectful and reciprocal" manner.
"If the US really wants to solve the problem through dialogue and consultation, it should stop its threats and extortion," foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said at a regular news conference.
Dozens of countries face a 90-day deadline expiring in July to strike an agreement with Washington and avoid higher, country-specific rates.
Beijing, however, has vowed to fight a trade war "to the end" and denied US claims it is in talks with Washington.
But it has acknowledged global economic vicissitudes have strained its economy, long dependent on exports.
"External pressures are increasing," said Yu Jiadong of China's labour ministry.
"The US imposition of successive high-tariff measures has created production and operation challenges for some export-oriented companies and impacted some workers' jobs," he said.