Trump Sets 50% US Tariffs on
Copper, Brazilian Imports Starting in August
·
Trump
raises Brazil's August 1 tariffs to 50% from 10% (Punishment for BRICS Leadership?)
·
Trump
sets 50% copper tariff to start August 1
·
Trump
sends tariff letters to Philippines, Iraq, Sri Lanka, others
·
EU
and US nearing trade agreement, says EU trade chief Sefcovic
·
EU
seeks protections for auto industry in complex talks
On
July 9, 2025, U.S. President Donald Trump announced a sharp increase in
tariffs:
·
50%
tariff on copper imports, citing national
security concerns under a "Section 232" investigation.
·
Tariffs
on Brazilian imports will rise from 10% to 50%,
starting August 1, 2025.
Trump
justified these actions by blaming prior administrations for the decline in the
U.S. copper industry, which he said is vital for semiconductors, electric
vehicles, and defense.
The
Brazil move is also politically motivated, with Trump criticizing Brazilian
President Lula over the prosecution of Bolsonaro and alleging censorship of
U.S. social media. He has initiated a "Section 301" probe into
Brazil's digital trade practices.
Additional
tariffs were announced on imports from:
·
Philippines
(20%)
·
Sri
Lanka, Algeria, Iraq, and Libya (30%)
·
Brunei
and Moldova (25%)
·
South
Korea and Japan (25%)
These
steps are part of a broader expansion of Trump's trade war, including threats
of future levies on semiconductors and pharmaceuticals.
While
trade tensions escalate, negotiations with the European Union continue, with hopes of a
framework deal before the extended deadline of August 1. Talks remain complex,
especially around protecting the EU auto industry.
The
Yale Budget Lab estimates that the effective
U.S. tariff rate has risen to 17.6%, the highest since 1934.
The Trump administration claims these tariffs could yield $300 billion in
revenue by year-end, though only two trade deals (with the UK and Vietnam) have
been finalized so far out of a promised "90 deals in 90 days."
[ABS News Service/11.07.2025]
U.S.
President Donald Trump launched his global tariff assault into overdrive on Wednesday
(09.07.2025), announcing a new 50% tariff on U.S. copper imports and a 50% duty
on goods from Brazil, both to start on August 1.
"I
am announcing a 50% TARIFF on Copper, effective August 1, 2025, after receiving
a robust NATIONAL SECURITY ASSESSMENT," Trump said in a post on his Truth Social
media platform, a reference to a "Section 232" national security trade
investigation into the red metal that has been underway.
The
announcement came hours after he also informed Brazil that its "reciprocal"
tariff on August 1 would rise to 50% from 10%, a shockingly high level for a country
with a balanced U.S. trade relationship.
Trump
first broached the copper tariff during a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, setting
off a scramble by companies to import as much copper as soon as possible from Chile
and other major suppliers.
He
blamed the decline of the U.S. copper industry on past administrations, saying copper
was needed for semiconductors, aircraft, electric vehicle batteries and military
hardware.
"America
will, once again, build a DOMINANT Copper Industry," Trump wrote.
Trump's
Brazil tariff order came in a letter to Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da
Silva that vented anger over what he called the "Witch Hunt" trial of
Lula's right-wing predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro, and adding to an increasingly
bitter public feud with Lula.
Trump
also criticized what he said were Brazil's attacks on free elections, Americans'
free speech and "SECRET and UNLAWFUL Censorship Orders to U.S. Social Media
platforms." He ordered the U.S. Trade Representative's office to launch a new
"Section 301" unfair trade practices investigation that could add even
more tariffs, citing "Brazil's continued attacks on the Digital Trade Activities
of American companies."
Lula
responded to Trump's letter by issuing a statement saying that any unilateral measure
to increase tariffs would be met with a response in accordance with Brazilian law.
Brad
Setser, a former U.S. trade official now with the Council on Foreign Relations,
said Trump's action could easily spiral into a damaging trade war between the two
democracies.
"This
shows the danger of having tariffs that are under the unilateral control of one
man," Setser said. "It's tied to the fact that Lula beat Trump's friend
Bolsonaro in the election."
Brazil
is the 15th largest U.S. trading partner, with total two-way trade of $92 billion
in 2024, and a rare $7.4 billion U.S. trade surplus, according to U.S. Census Bureau
data.
Top
U.S. exports to Brazil are commercial aircraft, petroleum products and crude oil,
coal and semiconductors while Brazil's top exports to the U.S. are crude oil, coffee,
semi-finished steel and pig iron.
The
South American country has held off on implementing a digital services tax but has
sought to advance legislation with stronger competition regulations on digital platforms.
Trump
earlier on his Truth Social media platform issued August 1 tariff notices to seven
minor trading partners that exported only $15 billion in goods to the U.S. last
year: a 20% tariff on goods from the Philippines, 30% on goods from Sri Lanka, Algeria,
Iraq, and Libya, and 25% on Brunei and Moldova.
The
latest letters add to 14 others issued earlier in the week including 25% tariffs
for powerhouse U.S. suppliers South Korea and Japan, which are also to take effect
August 1 barring any trade deals reached before then.
They
were issued a day after Trump said he was broadening his trade war by imposing a
50% tariff on imported copper and would soon introduce long-threatened levies on
semiconductors and pharmaceuticals. Trump's rapid-fire tariff moves have cast a
shadow over the global economic outlook, paralyzing business decision-making.
Negotiations with the EU
As
more tariff drama unfolded in Washington, U.S. and European Union negotiators pushed
closer to a trade deal to ease Trump's tariffs on the biggest bilateral U.S. trading
partner bloc.
Trump
said he would "probably" tell the EU within two days what rate it could
expect for its exports to the U.S., adding that the 27-nation bloc had become much
more cooperative.
EU
trade chief Maros Sefcovic said good progress had been made on a framework trade
agreement and a deal may even be possible within days.
Sefcovic
told EU lawmakers he hoped that EU negotiators could finalise their work soon, with
additional time now from the extension of a U.S. deadline to August 1 from July
9.
"I
hope to reach a satisfactory conclusion, potentially even in the coming days,"
Sefcovic said.
However,
Italian Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti had earlier warned that talks between
the two sides were "very complicated" and could continue right up to the
deadline.
EU
officials and auto industry sources said that U.S. and EU negotiators were discussing
a range of potential measures aimed at protecting the European Union's auto industry,
including tariff cuts, import quotas and credits against the value of EU automakers'
U.S. exports.
Highest Tariff Levels
Since 1934
Equity
markets shrugged off the Republican president's latest tariff salvo on Wednesday,
while the yen remained on the back foot after the levies imposed on Japan.
Following
Trump's announcement of higher tariffs for imports from the 14 countries, U.S. research
group Yale Budget Lab estimated consumers face an effective U.S. tariff rate of
17.6%, up from 15.8% previously and the highest in nine decades.
Trump's
administration has been touting those tariffs as a significant revenue source. Treasury
Secretary Scott Bessent said Washington has taken in about $100 billion so far and
could collect $300 billion by the end of the year. The United States has taken in
about $80 billion annually in tariff revenue in recent years.
The
Trump administration promised "90 deals in 90 days" after he unveiled
an array of country-specific duties in early April. So far, only two agreements
have been reached, with Britain and Vietnam. Trump has said a deal with India was
close.
Reporting
by Julia Payne, Charlotte Van Campenhout, Philip Blenkinsop,
Trevor Hunnicutt, Dan Burns; Writing by Keith Weir and David Lawder; Editing by
Alex Richardson, Deepa Babington and Diane Craft