Washington: President Donald Trump said he would announce on Monday that the United States will impose 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminium imports, including from Canada and Mexico, and other import duties later in the week. “Any steel coming into the United States is going to have a 25 per cent tariff,” he told reporters Sunday on Air Force One as he flew from Florida to New Orleans to attend the Super Bowl.
When asked about aluminium, he responded that Aluminum too, is subject to trade penalties. Trump also reaffirmed that he would announce reciprocal tariffs probably Tuesday or Wednesda, meaning that the US would impose import duties on products in cases where another country has levied duties on US goods. “If they are charging us 130 per cent and we're charging them nothing, it's not going to stay that way,” he told reporters.
ALSO READ: Tripura Secures Over Rs 3,500 Crore Investment With MoUs Signed By 87 Investors
Trump announces 25% steel, aluminum tariffs
Trump's comments are the latest example of his willingness to threaten and impose import taxes in some cases. Tariffs are coming much earlier in his presidency than during his previous four years in the White House when he prioritised tax cuts and deregulation. Trump has alternately said he sees import taxes as tools to force concessions on issues such as immigration but also as a source of revenue to help close the government's budget deficit. Financial markets fell on Friday after Trump first said he would impose the reciprocal tariffs. Stock prices also dropped after a measure of consumer sentiment declined on Friday, largely because many respondents cited tariffs as a growing worry. The survey also found that Americans are expecting inflation to tick up in the coming months because of the duties.
Trump’s Tariff Plans Spark Global Concerns, South Korea Evaluates Impact
Trump did not offer any details about the steel and aluminium duties or the reciprocal tariffs on Sunday. Trump previously threatened 25 per cent import taxes on all goods from Canada and Mexico, though he paused them for 30 days barely a week ago. At the same time, he proceeded to add 10 per cent duties on imports from China. Yet on Friday, he said he would also delay the tariffs on the millions of small packages — often from fast-fashion firms such as Temu and Shein — until customs officials can figure out ways to impose them. The small packages have previously been exempt from tariffs. Trump's latest remarks stirred immediate worry from some global trading partners.
ALSO READ: Japan Runs Record Current Account Surplus In 2024 On Foreign Investment Returns
South Korea's acting president, Choi Sang-mok, called a meeting with the country's top foreign policy and trade officials Monday to examine how Trump's proposed tariffs on steel and aluminium would affect its industries. The office of Choi, who also serves as the country's finance minister, said officials discussed the potential impact and Seoul's possible responses, but specific details of the meeting were not disclosed. The stock prices of major South Korean steelmakers, including POSCO and Hyundai Steel, dropped as the market opened on Monday. South Korea shipped about USD 4.8 billion worth of steel to the United States from January to November last year, which accounted for 14 per cent of its global exports of the products during the period.