WHY NOW?
On Sunday (March 30) US President Donald Trump announced that he will impose tariffs on all countries. He confirmed that the tariffs that would become effective on April 2 – which he has called ‘Liberation Day’ – would affect all countries and not a select few, as previously reported.
“We would start with all countries, so let’s see what happens,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One.
A tariff is a tax on imported goods and services. To Trump, a tariff is “the most beautiful word in the dictionary.”
Tariffs are typically a percentage of the product’s value.
Tariffs are typically used as a protectionist measure to defend a country’s domestic industries against rival imports from foreign countries.
The income from tariffs could boost government revenues, which in turn could be spent on public welfare measures.
For the US President, tariffs are a bargaining chip to force concessions from American trading partners on unrelated issues.
Trump also believes that tariffs can help resolve the US’s $1.2 trillion trade deficit with other countries, the imbalance caused by the country importing more than it exports. He also believes that the US charges low tariffs against the high duties and trade barriers imposed on American exports by other countries.
Trump also believes that tariffs would reduce the demand for imported products, and increase the demand for American goods, in turn, boosting manufacturing jobs in the US.
Depending on the demand for the product and the availability of viable substitutes, the burden of a tariff could fall entirely on the consumer or be shared with the manufacturer.
Tariffs add to the product costs, and importers, typically American companies, are affected by these. They typically choose to pass on the increased costs to consumers by increasing the prices.
However, tariffs also reduce the demand for goods exported by other countries, encouraging foreign companies to find ways to work around this, by cutting prices, to maintain their market share.
There is little clarity on how the universal tariffs would be implemented, but these are expected to become effective on Wednesday.
This would accompany an array of taxes already announced by the President, including:
HOW HAVE DIFFERENT COUNTRIES RESPONDED?