Donald Trump flags baseline tariff hike
Australia is captured by the baseline tariff regime, with a blanket 10 per cent impost slapped on most products flowing to the US despite a bilateral free-trade agreement.
The baseline tariff is imposed on top of sectoral duties – taxes targeting specific industries, such as steel and aluminium.
The US President floated his new tariff for 'the rest of the world' while speaking to reporters with Keir Starmer in Scotland overnight.
'I would say it'll be somewhere in the 15 to 20 per cent range,' Mr Trump said when pressed for a figure.
'Probably one of those two numbers.
'We're going to be setting a tariff for, essentially, the rest of the world.
'That's what they're going to pay if they want to do business in the United States, because you can't sit down and make 200 deals.'
To get all the latest news from US President Donald Trump and what it means for Australia as soon as it drops — download the news.com.au app.
US President Donald Trump says he could double the baseline tariff on foreign goods. Picture: Christopher Furlong / Pool / AFP
The Albanese government has responded, with a spokesperson for Trade Minister Don Farrell saying Australia would continue push for an Australian carve out.
'Any tariffs on Australian goods are unjustified and an act of economic self-harm,' the spokesperson said.
'We will continue to engage at all levels to advocate for the removal of all tariffs, in line with our free trade agreement with the United States.'
Assistant Treasurer Dan Mulino expanded a little, downplaying Mr Trump's comments as 'off-the-cuff'.
'We are a country that relies on trade,' he told Sky News.
'We are a country with a very high proportion of jobs that rely on trade.
'That remains the position of this government.
'So, we would rather a situation in which the world doesn't go down the path of imposing tariffs.
'But what I can say is that Australia remains in a situation where we've got as good a deal as anybody, and we continue to engage with the US Government intensely on these matters.'
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is again being urged to tee-up a meeting with US President Donald Trump. Picture: Martin Ollman / NewsWire
Meanwhile, opposition trade spokesman Kevin Hogan slammed Mr Trump's idea as 'really bad for global growth', warning it could 'encourage retaliation from other countries, and we certainly don't want to see a global trade war between, say, China and the US'.
'We're a huge exporting nation. Tariffs are bad policy,' he said.
'We, as the opposition, disagree with Trump's tariff policy, but again, it reinforces the urgency and the great disappointment that our prime minister hasn't had a face-to-face meeting with Trump.
'He needs to go over there and prosecute the case, to argue Australia's case, but also to stand up for free trade across the globe, because the importance of it for us as a trading nation, as Australia.'
Australia's biggest export to the US is beef, which was worth $5.7bn in 2024, according to Meat and Livestock Australia.
Read related topics: Donald Trump
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

AU Financial Review
11 minutes ago
- AU Financial Review
India-US oil spat could delay Albanese-Trump meeting
A deepening spat between the US and India could cancel this year's Quad leaders' summit, potentially delaying a planned meeting between Donald Trump and Anthony Albanese and undermining the region's premier democratic bloc against China's rise. The Albanese government is concerned by the escalating tensions after US President Donald Trump threatened to slug Indian exports to America with an extra 25 percentage points in tariffs unless it curbs purchases of Russian crude oil.


Canberra Times
11 minutes ago
- Canberra Times
Modi backs Indian farmers amid Trump's tariff salvo
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi says he will not compromise the interests of the country's farmers even if he has to pay a heavy price, in his first comments after US President Donald Trump's salvo of a 50 per cent tariff on Indian goods.

Sky News AU
11 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Potential Trump-Putin summit would be ‘performative'
Former foreign minister Alexander Downer says a potential summit between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin to broker a deal on the Ukraine war would be 'performative'. The clock is ticking for Moscow to enter a ceasefire deal with Kyiv after President Trump brought forward the deadline. US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Putin met overnight, in what Donald Trump has called highly productive discussions.