Trump
Eyes Simple Tariff Rates Over Complex Talks, says Letters Going Out Friday 4
July
·
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told
Bloomberg Television that about 100 countries are likely to see a reciprocal
tariff rate of 10% and predicted a "flurry" of trade deals announced
before a July 9 deadline when tariffs could rise sharply. If 10% tariffs were
given to 100 countries, that would be fewer than originally envisioned by the
Trump administration.
·
Its original reciprocal tariff list
showed 123 jurisdictions that would be given a 10% tariff rate
·
Many countries with an initial 10%
duty rate have not had any negotiations with the Trump administration, with the
exception of Britain, which reached a deal
in May to keep a 10% rate and won preferential treatment for some sectors
including autos and aircraft engines.
· Major trading partners now involved in negotiations were hit with much higher tariff rates, including 20% for the European Union, 26% for India and 24% for Japan. Other countries that have not engaged in trade talks with the Trump administration face even higher reciprocal tariffs, including 50% for the tiny mountain kingdom of Lesotho, 47% for Madagascar and 36% for Thailand.
[ABS
News Service/05.07.2025]
President Donald Trump said Washington
will start sending letters to countries on Friday specifying what tariff rates they
will face on imports to the United States, a clear shift from earlier pledges to
strike scores of individual deals.
Acknowledging the complexity of negotiating
with over 170 nations, Trump told reporters before departing for Iowa on Thursday
that the letters will be sent to 10 countries at a time, laying out tariff rates
such as 20% to 30%.
"We have more than 170 countries,
and how many deals can you make?" Trump said. "They're very much more
complicated."
The Republican president said he expected
"a couple" more detailed agreements with other countries after Wednesday's
announcement of a trade deal with Vietnam.
However, he said he preferred to notify
most other countries of a specific tariff rate, skipping detailed negotiations.
Trump's comments underscored the challenges
of completing trade agreements on everything from tariffs to non-tariff barriers
such as bans on agricultural imports.
Top Trump aides said in April they would
work on 90 deals in 90 days,
an ambitious goal that was met with skepticism from trade
experts familiar with arduous and time-consuming trade deals of the past.
If
10% tariffs were given to 100 countries, that would be fewer than originally envisioned
by the Trump administration.
Its
original reciprocal tariff list showed 123 jurisdictions that would be given a 10%
tariff rate - mostly small countries, along with some territories such
as Australia's uninhabited Heard and McDonald Islands.
Trump sent markets into a tailspin on April
2 with sweeping reciprocal tariff rates ranging from 10% to 50%, although he temporarily
reduced the tariff
rate for most countries to 10% to allow time for negotiations through July 9.
Many
countries with an initial 10% duty rate have not had any negotiations with the Trump
administration, with the exception of Britain, which reached a deal
in May to keep a 10% rate and won preferential treatment for some sectors including
autos and aircraft engines.
Trump on Wednesday announced an agreement
with Vietnam that he said cuts U.S. tariffs on many Vietnamese goods to 20% from
his previously threatened 46%. Many U.S. products would be allowed to enter Vietnam
duty free.