
Trump signals Canada, China and Mexico tariffs could take effect next week, with 'reciprocal' tariffs planned for April
President Donald Trump said Thursday that 25% tariffs on goods imported from Canada and Mexico would go into effect next Tuesday, March 4.
In a post on his Truth Social app, Trump said the tariffs were needed to combat continued drug flows into the U.S.
"We cannot allow this scourge to continue to harm the USA," he wrote, adding that the tariffs would be imposed "until it stops, or is seriously limited."
Trump also said reciprocal tariffs on major trading partners, which the president threatened earlier this month, were slated to take effect April 2.
Major stock indexes retreated on the news after notching earlier gains Thursday morning. Trump has continued to keep markets off balance as he has advanced, then withdrawn, various tariff proposals in recent weeks. He has also offered conflicting rationales for imposing them, with a long-running fixation on closing the U.S. trade deficit giving way to ongoing concerns about drug flows — even though interdiction data from the U.S. Customs and Border Control show trafficking is already in retreat.
Days after first proposing the Canada and Mexico duties earlier this month, the president announced he was suspending them for 30 days after signaling he had won concessions from the two nations. Some experts said some of those gains, which included a troop deployment by Mexico and a new anti-drug policy for Canada were less substantial than heralded.
A proposal for steel and aluminum tariffs announced earlier this month was also slated to take effect March 4 — but Trump did not mention those duties in his Thursday social media post.
More recently, the president called for tariffs on autos, computer chips and pharmaceuticals.
Yet those, too, went unmentioned in his Thursday post.
And as for the reciprocal duties now planned for April, the White House has signaled those tariffs would also be contingent on studies of their potential impact.
All told, though Trump has threatened a bevy of tariffs since taking office, only an additional 10% duty on Chinese goods on top of pre-existing levies on that nation have gone into effect so far.
Still, many analysts say the unpredictability alone created by Trump's tariffs talk has already taken a toll on markets and the economy.
"Instead of clearing up the uncertainty about the direction of U.S. economic policy, Donald Trump's victory in last November's presidential election has only magnified it," Capital Economics research and consultancy group said in a note to clients Thursday morning, "with threats of massive punitive tariffs and the potential upending of traditional geopolitical alliances plunging the rest of the world into a state of heightened uncertainty too. Uncertainty could end up weighing on global investment and consumer spending for an extended period, particularly if Trump repeatedly pushes back his tariff deadlines."
Trump has previously stated the duties would bring in revenues and help close America's budget deficit.
'Our country will be extremely liquid and rich again,' Trump said.
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
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'For many of these companies, the business strategy hedges on a scenario where the U.S. and China become more confrontational and where trade relations become more uncomfortable,' McBride said. 'And all of a sudden, what was once an uneconomic project somewhere outside of China starts to make more sense.' ___


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