Tony Romm
Ana Swanson
April 7,
2025, 12:45 p.m. ET21 minutes ago
Tony Romm
and Ana SwansonReporting from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/04/07/business/trump-tariffs-stock-market
Trump
threatens huge tariffs on China in response to Beijing’s retaliation.
President
Trump on Monday issued a new ultimatum to China: Rescind its retaliatory
tariffs, or face a 104 percent tax on its exports to the United States starting
later this week.
The
president’s threat risked another major escalation in what has already become a
costly and damaging global trade war, one that has roiled financial markets as
countries around the world scramble to calibrate a response to Washington.
After Mr.
Trump announced last week that he would impose a new 34 percent tariff on
China, Beijing responded in force, threatening to impose a 34 percent tax on
U.S. imports.
In response,
Mr. Trump said Monday in a post on Truth Social that the United States would
“impose ADDITIONAL Tariffs on China of 50%, effective April 9th.” White House
officials later clarified that the tariff would be additive, potentially
bringing the total taxes that Mr. Trump has imposed on Chinese imports since he
came into office to 104 percent.
Those levies
would come in addition to tariffs Mr. Trump placed on many products from China
in his first term, along with tariffs that apply to individual products because
of specific trade violations.
The
escalation could result in a huge surcharge for importers bringing clothing,
cellphones, chemicals and machinery in from China, which may see the cost of
their imports double. American consumers last year bought $440 billion of goods
from China, the second-largest source of U.S. imports after Mexico.
The
president also threatened that talks with China “will be terminated!” if
Beijing did not back down from its pledge to retaliate.
In making
that threat, Mr. Trump appeared to issue a stark warning to nations around the
world that he would issue punishing additional tariffs if U.S. trading partners
tried to rebuff his policies. His comments carried particular urgency on a day
that officials in the European Union planned to circulate a list of U.S.
products that they could soon subject to tariffs.
Mr. Trump
explicitly referred to his earlier threat that “any country that Retaliates
against the U.S.” would be “immediately met with new and substantially higher
Tariffs, over and above those initially set.” But he also said negotiations
would begin with “other countries” starting immediately.
Jeanna
Smialek contributed reporting.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário