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Monday, April 28, 2025

Trump’s tariffs have launched global trade wars

by

17 days ago
20250410
President Donald Trump speaks during an event to announce new tariffs in the Rose Garden of the White House, Wednesday, April 2, 2025, in Washington, as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick listens. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Donald Trump speaks during an event to announce new tariffs in the Rose Garden of the White House, Wednesday, April 2, 2025, in Washington, as Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick listens. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Long-threat­ened tar­iffs from U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump have plunged the coun­try in­to trade wars abroad — all while on-again, off-again new levies con­tin­ue to es­ca­late un­cer­tain­ty.

Trump is no stranger to tar­iffs. He launched a trade war dur­ing his first term, tak­ing par­tic­u­lar aim at Chi­na by putting tax­es on most of its goods. Bei­jing re­spond­ed with its own re­tal­ia­to­ry tar­iffs on U.S. prod­ucts rang­ing from fruit to au­to­mo­tive im­ports. Mean­while, Trump al­so used the threat of more tar­iffs to force Cana­da and Mex­i­co to rene­go­ti­ate a North Amer­i­can trade pact, called the U.S.-Mex­i­co-Cana­da Agree­ment, in 2020.

When Pres­i­dent Joe Biden took of­fice, he pre­served most of the tar­iffs Trump pre­vi­ous­ly en­act­ed against Chi­na, in ad­di­tion to im­pos­ing some new re­stric­tions — but his ad­min­is­tra­tion claimed to take a more tar­get­ed ap­proach.

Fast-for­ward to to­day, and econ­o­mists stress there could be greater con­se­quences on busi­ness­es and economies world­wide un­der Trump’s more sweep­ing tar­iffs this time around — and that high­er prices will like­ly leave con­sumers foot­ing the bill. There’s al­so been a sense of whiplash from Trump’s back-and-forth tar­iff threats and re­spond­ing re­tal­i­a­tion seen over the last few months.

Read more:

Here’s a time­line of how we got here:

Jan­u­ary 20

Trump is sworn in­to of­fice. In his in­au­gur­al ad­dress, he again promis­es to “tar­iff and tax for­eign coun­tries to en­rich our cit­i­zens.” And he re­it­er­ates plans to cre­ate an agency called the Ex­ter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice, which has yet to be es­tab­lished.

On his first day in of­fice, Trump al­so says he ex­pects to put 25% tar­iffs on Cana­da and Mex­i­co start­ing on Feb. 1, while de­clin­ing to im­me­di­ate­ly flesh out plans for tax­ing Chi­nese im­ports.

Jan­u­ary 26

Trump threat­ens 25% tar­iffs on all Colom­bia im­ports and oth­er re­tal­ia­to­ry mea­sures af­ter Pres­i­dent Gus­ta­vo Petro’s re­jects two U.S. mil­i­tary air­craft car­ry­ing mi­grants to the coun­try, ac­cus­ing Trump of not treat­ing im­mi­grants with dig­ni­ty dur­ing de­por­ta­tion.

In re­sponse, Petro al­so an­nounces a re­tal­ia­to­ry 25% in­crease in Colom­bian tar­iffs on U.S. goods. But Colom­bia lat­er re­versed its de­ci­sion and ac­cept­ed the flights car­ry­ing mi­grants. The two coun­tries soon sig­naled a halt in the trade dis­pute.

Feb­ru­ary 1

Trump signs an ex­ec­u­tive or­der to im­pose tar­iffs on im­ports from Mex­i­co, Cana­da and Chi­na — 10% on all im­ports from Chi­na and 25% on im­ports from Mex­i­co and Cana­da start­ing Feb. 4. Trump in­voked this pow­er by de­clar­ing a na­tion­al emer­gency — os­ten­si­bly over un­doc­u­ment­ed im­mi­gra­tion and drug traf­fick­ing.

The ac­tion prompts swift out­rage from all three coun­tries, with promis­es of re­tal­ia­to­ry mea­sures.

Feb­ru­ary 3

Trump agrees to a 30-day pause on his tar­iff threats against Mex­i­co and Cana­da, as both trad­ing part­ners take steps to ap­pease Trump’s con­cerns about bor­der se­cu­ri­ty and drug traf­fick­ing.

Feb­ru­ary 4

Trump’s new 10% tar­iffs on all Chi­nese im­ports to the U.S. still go in­to ef­fect. Chi­na re­tal­i­ates the same day by an­nounc­ing a flur­ry of coun­ter­mea­sures, in­clud­ing sweep­ing new du­ties on a va­ri­ety of Amer­i­can goods and an an­ti-mo­nop­oly in­ves­ti­ga­tion in­to Google.

Chi­na’s 15% tar­iffs on coal and liq­ue­fied nat­ur­al gas prod­ucts, and a 10% levy on crude oil, agri­cul­tur­al ma­chin­ery and large-en­gine cars im­port­ed from the U.S., take ef­fect Feb. 10.

Feb­ru­ary 10

Trump an­nounces plans to hike steel and alu­minum tar­iffs start­ing March 12. He re­moves the ex­emp­tions from his 2018 tar­iffs on steel, mean­ing that all steel im­ports will be taxed at a min­i­mum of 25%, and al­so rais­es his 2018 alu­minum tar­iffs from 10% to 25%.

Feb­ru­ary 13

Trump an­nounces a plan for “rec­i­p­ro­cal” tar­iffs — promis­ing to in­crease U.S. tar­iffs to match the tax rates that oth­er coun­tries charge on im­ports “for pur­pos­es of fair­ness.” Econ­o­mists warn that the rec­i­p­ro­cal tar­iffs, set to over­turn decades of trade pol­i­cy, could cre­ate chaos for glob­al busi­ness­es.

Be­yond Chi­na, Cana­da and Mex­i­co, he lat­er in­di­cates that ad­di­tion­al coun­tries, such as In­dia and Eu­ro­pean na­tions, won’t be spared from high­er tar­iffs.

Feb­ru­ary 25

Trump signs an ex­ec­u­tive or­der in­struct­ing the Com­merce De­part­ment to con­sid­er whether a tar­iff on im­port­ed cop­per is need­ed to pro­tect na­tion­al se­cu­ri­ty. He cites the ma­te­r­i­al’s use in U.S. de­fense, in­fra­struc­ture and emerg­ing tech­nolo­gies.

March 1

Trump signs an ad­di­tion­al ex­ec­u­tive or­der in­struct­ing the Com­merce De­part­ment to con­sid­er whether tar­iffs on lum­ber and tim­ber are al­so need­ed to pro­tect na­tion­al se­cu­ri­ty, ar­gu­ing that the con­struc­tion in­dus­try and mil­i­tary de­pend on a strong sup­ply of wood­en prod­ucts in the U.S.

March 4

Trump’s 25% tar­iffs on im­ports from Cana­da and Mex­i­co go in­to ef­fect, though he lim­its the levy to 10% on Cana­di­an en­er­gy. He al­so dou­bles the tar­iff on all Chi­nese im­ports to 20%.

A truck loaded with pro­duce from Mex­i­co and Cana­da pass­es through Pharr, Texas, Tues­day, March 4, 2025. (AP Pho­to/Er­ic Gay)

All three coun­tries promise re­tal­ia­to­ry mea­sures. Cana­di­an Prime Min­is­ter Justin Trudeau an­nounces tar­iffs on more than $100 bil­lion of Amer­i­can goods over the course of 21 days. And Mex­i­can Pres­i­dent Clau­dia Shein­baum says her coun­try would re­spond with its own re­tal­ia­to­ry tar­iffs on U.S. goods with­out spec­i­fy­ing the tar­get­ed prod­ucts im­me­di­ate­ly, sig­nal­ing hopes to de-es­ca­late.

Chi­na, mean­while, im­pos­es tar­iffs of up to 15% on a wide ar­ray of key U.S. farm ex­ports, set to take ef­fect March 10. It al­so ex­pands the num­ber of U.S. com­pa­nies sub­ject to ex­port con­trols and oth­er re­stric­tions by about two dozen.

March 5

Trump grants a one-month ex­emp­tion on his new tar­iffs im­pact­ing goods from Mex­i­co and Cana­da for U.S. au­tomak­ers. The pause ar­rives af­ter the pres­i­dent spoke with lead­ers of the “Big 3” au­tomak­ers — Ford, Gen­er­al Mo­tors and Stel­lan­tis.

March 6

In a wider ex­ten­sion, Trump post­pones 25% tar­iffs on many im­ports from Mex­i­co and some im­ports from Cana­da for a month. But he still plans to im­pose “rec­i­p­ro­cal” tar­iffs start­ing on April 2.

Trump cred­it­ed Shein­baum with mak­ing progress on bor­der se­cu­ri­ty and drug smug­gling as a rea­son for again paus­ing tar­iffs. His ac­tions al­so thaw re­la­tions with Cana­da some­what, al­though out­rage and un­cer­tain­ty re­mains. Still, af­ter its ini­tial re­tal­ia­to­ry tar­iffs of $30 bil­lion Cana­di­an (US$21 bil­lion) on U.S. goods, the gov­ern­ment said it had sus­pend­ed its sec­ond wave of re­tal­ia­to­ry tar­iffs worth $125 bil­lion Cana­di­an (US$87 bil­lion).

March 10

Chi­na’s re­tal­ia­to­ry 15% tar­iffs on key Amer­i­can farm prod­ucts — in­clud­ing chick­en, pork, soy­beans and beef — take ef­fect. Goods al­ready in tran­sit are set to be ex­empt through April 12, per Chi­na’s Com­merce Min­istry pre­vi­ous an­nounce­ment.

March 12

Trump’s new tar­iffs on all steel and alu­minum im­ports go in­to ef­fect. Both met­als are now taxed at 25% across the board — with Trump’s or­der to re­move steel ex­emp­tions and raise alu­minum’s levy from his pre­vi­ous­ly-im­posed 2018 im­port tax­es.

The Eu­ro­pean Union takes re­tal­ia­to­ry trade ac­tion promis­ing new du­ties on U.S. in­dus­tri­al and farm prod­ucts. The mea­sures will cov­er goods from the Unit­ed States worth some 26 bil­lion eu­ros ($28 bil­lion), and not just steel and alu­minum prod­ucts, but al­so tex­tiles, home ap­pli­ances and agri­cul­tur­al goods. Mo­tor­cy­cles, bour­bon, peanut but­ter and jeans will be hit, as they were dur­ing Trump’s first term. The 27-mem­ber bloc lat­er says it will de­lay this re­tal­ia­to­ry ac­tion un­til mid-April.

Cana­da, mean­while, an­nounces plans to im­pose re­tal­ia­to­ry tar­iffs worth Cana­di­an $29.8 bil­lion ($20.7 bil­lion) on U.S. im­ports, set to go in­to ef­fect March 13.

March 13

Trump threat­ens a 200% tar­iff on Eu­ro­pean wine, Cham­pagne and spir­its if the Eu­ro­pean Union goes for­ward with its pre­vi­ous­ly-an­nounced plans for a 50% tar­iff on Amer­i­can whiskey.

March 24

Trump says he will place a 25% tar­iff on all im­ports from any coun­try that buys oil or gas from Venezuela, in ad­di­tion to im­pos­ing new tar­iffs on the South Amer­i­can coun­try it­self, start­ing April 2.

The tar­iffs would most like­ly add to the tax­es fac­ing Chi­na, which in 2023 bought 68% of the oil ex­port­ed by Venezuela, per the U.S. En­er­gy In­for­ma­tion Ad­min­is­tra­tion. But a num­ber of coun­tries al­so re­ceive oil from Venezuela — in­clud­ing the Unit­ed States it­self.

March 26

Trump says he is plac­ing 25% tar­iffs on au­to im­ports, a move that the White House claims would fos­ter do­mes­tic man­u­fac­tur­ing. But it could al­so put a fi­nan­cial squeeze on au­tomak­ers that de­pend on glob­al sup­ply chains.

These au­to im­ports will start be­ing col­lect­ed April 3 — start­ing with tax­es on ful­ly-im­port­ed cars. The tar­iffs are set to then ex­pand to ap­plic­a­ble au­to parts in the fol­low­ing weeks, through May 3.

April 2

Trump an­nounces his long-promised “rec­i­p­ro­cal” tar­iffs — de­clar­ing a 10% base­line tax on im­ports across the board start­ing April 5, as well as high­er rates for dozens of na­tions that run trade sur­plus­es with the U.S. to take ef­fect April 9.

Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump speaks dur­ing an event to an­nounce new tar­iffs in the Rose Gar­den of the White House, Wednes­day, April 2, 2025, in Wash­ing­ton, as Com­merce Sec­re­tary Howard Lut­nick lis­tens. (AP Pho­to/Evan Vuc­ci)

Among those steep­er levies, Trump says the U.S. will now charge a 34% tax on im­ports from Chi­na, a 20% tax on im­ports from the Eu­ro­pean Union, 25% on South Ko­rea, 24% on Japan and 32% on Tai­wan. The new tar­iffs come on top of pre­vi­ous­ly-im­posed levies, in­clud­ing the 20% tax Trump an­nounced on all Chi­nese im­ports ear­li­er this year.

Mean­while, for goods from Cana­da and Mex­i­co, the White House says USM­CA-com­pli­ant im­ports can con­tin­ue to en­ter the U.S. du­ty free. Once the two coun­tries have sat­is­fied Trump’s de­mands on im­mi­gra­tion and drug traf­fick­ing, the White House adds, the tar­iff on the rest of their im­ports may drop from 25% to 12%.

April 3

Trump’s pre­vi­ous­ly-an­nounced au­to tar­iffs be­gin. Prime Min­is­ter Mark Car­ney says that Cana­da will match the 25% levies with a tar­iff on ve­hi­cles im­port­ed from the U.S.

April 4

Chi­na an­nounces plans to im­pose a 34% tar­iff on im­ports of all U.S. prod­ucts be­gin­ning April 10, match­ing Trump’s new “rec­i­p­ro­cal” tar­iff on Chi­nese goods, as part of a flur­ry of re­tal­ia­to­ry mea­sures.

The Com­merce Min­istry in Bei­jing says it will al­so im­pose more ex­port con­trols on rare earths, which are ma­te­ri­als used in high-tech prod­ucts like com­put­er chips and elec­tric ve­hi­cle bat­ter­ies. And the gov­ern­ment adds 27 firms to lists of com­pa­nies sub­ject to trade sanc­tions or ex­port con­trols.

April 5

Trump’s 10% min­i­mum tar­iff on near­ly all coun­tries and ter­ri­to­ries takes ef­fect.

April 9

Trump’s high­er “rec­i­p­ro­cal” rates go in­to ef­fect, hik­ing tax­es on im­ports from dozens of coun­tries just af­ter mid­night. But hours lat­er, his ad­min­is­tra­tion says it will sus­pend most of these high­er rates for 90 days, while main­tain­ing the re­cent­ly-im­posed 10% levy on near­ly all glob­al im­ports.

Chi­na is the ex­cep­tion. Af­ter fol­low­ing through on a threat to raise levies against Chi­na to a to­tal of 104%, Trump says he will now raise those im­port tax­es to 125% “ef­fec­tive im­me­di­ate­ly” — es­ca­lat­ing tit-for-tat du­ties that have piled up be­tween the two coun­tries.

Chi­na upped its re­tal­i­a­tion pri­or to this an­nounce­ment — vow­ing to tax Amer­i­can goods at 84% start­ing April 10.

Cana­da’s counter tar­iffs on au­to im­ports al­so take ef­fect. The coun­try im­ple­ments a 25% levy on au­to im­ports from the U.S. that do not com­ply with the 2020 USM­CA pact.

Mean­while, EU mem­ber states vote to ap­prove their own re­tal­ia­to­ry levies on 20.9 bil­lion eu­ros ($23 bil­lion) of U.S. goods in re­sponse to Trump’s pre­vi­ous­ly-im­posed steel and alu­minum tar­iffs. The EU’s ex­ec­u­tive com­mis­sion doesn’t im­me­di­ate­ly spec­i­fy which im­ports it will tax, but notes its counter tar­iffs will come in stages — with some set to ar­rive on April 15, and oth­ers May 15 and Dec. 1.

April 10

The White House clar­i­fies that Trump’s pre­vi­ous­ly-an­nounced 125% fig­ure for tar­iffs against Chi­na is ac­tu­al­ly 145%, once his pre­vi­ous 20% fen­tanyl tar­iffs are ac­count­ed for.

Sep­a­rate­ly, the EU puts its steel and alu­minum tar­iff re­tal­i­a­tion on hold for 90 days, to match Trump’s pause on steep­er “rec­i­p­ro­cal” levies. Eu­ro­pean Com­mis­sion Pres­i­dent Ur­su­la von der Leyen says the com­mis­sion wants to give ne­go­ti­a­tions with the U.S. a chance — but warns coun­ter­mea­sures will kick in if talks “are not sat­is­fac­to­ry.”

By WY­AT­TE GRANTHAM-PHILIPS

NEW YORK (AP)


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