Trump Reciprocal Tariffs – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 13 Feb 2025 20:16:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png Trump Reciprocal Tariffs – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Trump’s Reciprocal Tariff Move Before PM Modi Meet https://artifex.news/india-charges-tremendous-tariffs-says-trump-while-announcing-reciprocal-taxes-hours-before-meeting-pm-modi-7705373rand29/ Thu, 13 Feb 2025 20:16:41 +0000 https://artifex.news/india-charges-tremendous-tariffs-says-trump-while-announcing-reciprocal-taxes-hours-before-meeting-pm-modi-7705373rand29/ Read More “Trump’s Reciprocal Tariff Move Before PM Modi Meet” »

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Washington DC:

Shortly after announcing sweeping reciprocal tariffs which will impact all nations which impose tariffs on US goods, Donald Trump spoke about how India is “right at the top of the pack” when it comes to tariffs. President Trump’s remarks come hours before his bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during which the two leaders will discuss the entire gamut of India-US ties. Tariffs will figure high on the agenda.

Speaking to reporters at the Oval Office after making the announcement for reciprocal tariffs, President Trump said “allies are often worse than enemies” and said the US will now impose a tit-for tat tariff on all nations which imposes tariffs on US goods.

President Trump said “India charges tremendously high tariffs”. He recalled how “Harley Davidson couldn’t sell their motorbikes in India because of the fact that in India – the tariff was so high.”

He went on to say that “Harley was forced to build… But I think they built a factory in India in order to avoid paying the tariffs. And that’s what people can do with us too.” The President, who has called ‘tariffs’ his favourite word in the dictionary on multiple occasions, aims to follow this model of trade aiming to “make America great again”.

He said companies that wish to sell their products in the US would need to set up factories and industries in the United States to avoid steep tariffs. “They can build a factory here, a plant or whatever it may be here and that includes the medical, that includes cars, that includes chips and semiconductors,” he said.

Earlier in the day, tech billionaire and Donald Trump’s biggest supporter and confidant Elon Musk and his family met PM Modi. Musk, who is the founder of Tesla and SpaceX, has been contemplating bringing his business to India. He has made announcements about it in the past, but has not yet started his factories in India.

Speaking about Elon Musk, President Trump said, “They met. I assume he wants to do business in India. But India is a very hard place to do business in because of the tariffs,” adding that “I would imagine he met possibly because he is running a company, he is doing this as something that he has felt strongly about for a long time.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is in the US on a two-day official visit. He will be holding bilateral talks with US President Donald Trump. While the two leaders will discuss the entire gamut of India-US ties, tariffs, visas, and immigration will be key focus areas.

Days before PM Modi’s visit to the US, India, in the Union Budget presented in Parliament on February 1, significantly reduced customs duties on high-end motorcycles, cars and smartphone parts – a move which will give a big boost to American companies like Harley-Davidson, Tesla and Apple.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, however, made it clear that custom duty rationalisation was introduced in the Budget to ensure Indian economy become aatmanirbhar (self-reliant), and is not a signal amid Donald Trump’s tariff announcements.

“We are looking at our own economy. We are looking to strengthen the foundation of the Indian economy, to make it a manufacturing hub,” she said while speaking exclusively to NDTV’s Sanjay Pugalia.
 




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Trump’s ‘Eye-For-An-Eye’ Tariff, How It Will Impact Nations https://artifex.news/explained-what-are-trumps-reciprocal-tariffs-and-who-might-be-affected-7703841/ Thu, 13 Feb 2025 15:30:26 +0000 https://artifex.news/explained-what-are-trumps-reciprocal-tariffs-and-who-might-be-affected-7703841/ Read More “Trump’s ‘Eye-For-An-Eye’ Tariff, How It Will Impact Nations” »

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Washington:

US President Donald Trump has threatened to broaden his trade war by unveiling reciprocal tariffs Thursday, the latest among sweeping measures targeting allies and competitors alike.

Trump’s fresh salvo, which he said would hit “every country,” could bring a broad tariff hike on emerging market economies and add to inflation fears domestically, analysts warn.

– What are reciprocal tariffs? –

Tariffs are taxes imposed on goods imported from another country.

As for reciprocal tariffs — during election campaigning, Trump promised: “An eye for an eye, a tariff for a tariff, same exact amount.”

“Every country will be reciprocal,” Trump said Sunday. He was due to hold a news conference offering more details on Thursday afternoon.

Analysts expect reciprocal tariffs to mean hiking rates on imports to match the level that other countries apply to US products.

Matching this based on specific products would likely raise the United States’ average tariff rate by around two percentage points, said Goldman Sachs analysts in a recent note.

Doing so to match the average tariff imposed by countries raises the US rate by a smaller amount, the note added.

But taking a product-focused approach has its complexities.

While Washington has relatively low average tariffs at a 2.7 percent rate in 2022, it has higher rates in “very politically sensitive” areas such as apparel, sugar and pick-up trucks, said Cato Institute’s Scott Lincicome.

Similarly, including non-tariff barriers like regulations in the calculus would add to complications.

– Who will be impacted? –

Reciprocal tariffs may open the door to “a broad tariff hike” on emerging market economies that have high duties on US products, JPMorgan analysts expect.

If officials go by average tariff rates applied on all products, countries like India or Thailand — which tax imports at higher average rates than the United States does — could be more affected.

Trump has previously slammed India as a “very big abuser” on trade and this week, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett told CNBC that India had high tariffs that lock out imports.

Lincicome cautioned that high tariffs are often also imposed by poorer countries, who use them as a tool for revenue and protection as they have fewer resources to impose non-tariff barriers like regulatory protectionism.

Goldman Sachs estimates that “there should be no effect on countries with free trade agreements like Mexico, Canada, and (South) Korea, limiting the overall impact” if Washington took a country-based approach to reciprocal tariffs.

– What are the complications? –

It remains unclear if Trump views reciprocal tariffs as an alternative to a universal tariff of between 10 and 20 percent that he floated on the campaign trail — or a separate policy.

One risk is that the Trump administration could use “reciprocal tariffs” to address non-tariff issues, said Goldman Sachs in a note. In particular, he could consider value-added taxes (VATs) when deciding how much to adjust tariffs.

Doing so stands to raise the average effective tariff rate by another 10 percentage points, Goldman analysts added.

Such a move might also be a response to high European Union VATs, JPMorgan said.

– What is the goal? –

“One of the objectives is to create uncertainty as a negotiating tactic, but uncertainty is a tax on doing business,” Jeffrey Schott, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, earlier told AFP.

Unpredictability surrounding tariffs, retaliation and non-trade issues all contribute to a situation that weighs on US and foreign firms, he said.

In the case of allies like Europe, Schott said, US objectives in negotiation could involve “economic and geopolitical priorities, including Ukraine.”

They could include finding a better resolution of the situation in Ukraine, which has been fighting off a Russian invasion since 2022, but also to expand US exports in key sectors like liquefied natural gas (LNG).

– Two-way street? –

When it comes to its average general tariff rate, the United States stands around the middle among wealthy, industrialized countries, said Cato’s Lincicome.

“Should Trump’s system be based on average tariff rates, then ‘true’ reciprocity would require US tariff rate reductions on goods from dozens of countries,” he added in a recent report.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)




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