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Trump's broad tariffs go into effect

Trump's broad tariffs go into effect

The White House said that starting just after midnight, goods from more than 60 countries and the European Union (EU) would face tariff rates of 10% or higher.
Products from the EU, Japan and South Korea will be taxed at 15%, while imports from Taiwan, Vietnam and Bangladesh will be taxed at 20%.
For places such as the EU, Japan and South Korea, Mr Trump also expects them to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in the US.
'I think the growth is going to be unprecedented,' Mr Trump said on Wednesday afternoon.
He added that the US was 'taking in hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs', but he could not provide a specific figure for revenues because 'we don't even know what the final number is' regarding tariff rates.
Despite the uncertainty, the Trump White House is confident that the onset of his broad tariffs will provide clarity about the path of the world's largest economy.
Now that companies understand the direction the US is headed, the administration believes it can ramp up new investments and jump-start hiring in ways that can rebalance the US economy as a manufacturing power.
But so far, there are signs of self-inflicted wounds to America as companies and consumers alike brace for the impact of new taxes.
What the data has shown is a US economy that changed in April with Mr Trump's initial rollout of tariffs, an event that led to market drama, a negotiating period and Mr Trump's ultimate decision to start his universal tariffs on Thursday.
After April, economic reports show that hiring began to stall, inflationary pressures crept upward and home values in key markets started to decline, said John Silvia, chief executive of Dynamic Economic Strategy.
'A less productive economy requires fewer workers,' Mr Silvia said in an analysis note.
'But there is more, the higher tariff prices lower workers' real wages. The economy has become less productive, and firms cannot pay the same real wages as before. Actions have consequences.'
Even then, the ultimate transformations of the tariffs are unknown and could play out over months, if not years.
Many economists say the risk is that the American economy is steadily eroded rather than collapsing instantly.
'We all want it to be made for television where it's this explosion – it's not like that,' said Brad Jensen, a professor at Georgetown University.
'It's going to be fine sand in the gears and slow things down.'
Mr Trump has promoted the tariffs as a way to reduce the persistent trade deficit.
But importers sought to avoid the taxes by importing more goods before the taxes went into effect.
As a result, the 582.7 billion dollar trade imbalance for the first half of the year was 38% higher than in 2024.
Total construction spending has dropped 2.9% over the past year.
The lead-up to Thursday fit the slapdash nature of Mr Trump's tariffs, which have been variously rolled out, walked back, delayed, increased, imposed by letter and frantically renegotiated.
The process has been so muddled that officials for key trade partners were unclear at the start of the week whether the tariffs would begin on Thursday or Friday.
The language of the July 31 order to delay the start of tariffs from August 1 said the higher tax rates would start in seven days.
On Wednesday morning, Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, was asked if the new tariffs began at midnight on Thursday, and he said reporters should check with the US Trade Representative's Office.
Mr Trump on Wednesday announced additional 25% tariffs to be imposed on India for its buying of Russian oil, bringing its total import taxes to 50%.
He has said that import taxes are still coming on pharmaceutical drugs and announced 100% tariffs on computer chips, meaning the US economy could remain in a place of suspended animation as it awaits the impact.
The president's use of a 1977 law to declare an economic emergency to impose the tariffs is also under challenge.
The impending ruling from last week's hearing before a US appeals court could cause Mr Trump to find other legal justifications if judges say he exceeded his authority.
Even people who worked with Mr Trump during his first term are sceptical that things will go smoothly for the economy, such as Paul Ryan, the former Republican House of Representatives speaker, who has emerged as a Trump critic.
'There's no sort of rationale for this other than the president wanting to raise tariffs based upon his whims, his opinions,' Mr Ryan told CNBC on Wednesday.
'I think choppy waters are ahead because I think they're going to have some legal challenges.'
Still, the stock market has been solid during the recent tariff drama, with the S&P 500 index climbing more than 25% from its April low.
The market's rebound and the income tax cuts in Mr Trump's tax and spending measures signed into law on July 4 have given the White House confidence that economic growth is bound to accelerate in the coming months.
As of now, Mr Trump still foresees an economic boom while the rest of the world and American voters wait nervously.
'There's one person who can afford to be cavalier about the uncertainty that he's creating, and that's Donald Trump,' said Rachel West, a senior fellow at The Century Foundation who worked in the Biden White House on labour policy.
'The rest of Americans are already paying the price for that uncertainty.'
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