New Tariffs Surpass First-Term Levels, Escalating Trade Tensions
The U.S. will impose sweeping new tariffs starting Tuesday, with a 25% levy on imports from Canada and Mexico and an additional 10% on Chinese goods. The move significantly expands Trump-era trade policies, heightening tensions with key allies and rivals alike.
To ease consumer impact, Canadian energy imports—including oil, gas, and electricity—will face a lower 10% tariff. However, Canada swiftly retaliated with matching 25% tariffs on $155 billion worth of U.S. goods, including alcohol and fruit. Mexico also announced countermeasures, while China condemned the move, promising legal action and further retaliation.
President Trump signed the tariff orders on Saturday, tying their removal to resolving illegal immigration and drug trafficking concerns at U.S. borders.
While some China hawks support the tough stance, critics argue that Trump’s approach lacks a clear strategy.
“There’s no coherent plan on tariffs,” said Derek Scissors, a former Trump trade advisor and senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. “He’s winging it—misstating trade deficits and blaming Canada for fentanyl smuggling.”
The markets reacted negatively, with the Dow dropping 0.8%, the S&P 500 down 0.5%, and the Nasdaq slipping 0.3%.
“We expected tariffs—but not Canada and Mexico first,” wrote Chris Krueger, a policy strategist at TD Cowen. “The chaos premium is real.”
The tariffs will be enforced under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, requiring a national emergency declaration. While legal challenges are expected, courts generally defer to the president on national security issues.
Brad Setser, a former senior U.S. trade advisor, warned on X that these tariffs represent a “massive shock” to the U.S. economy, describing them as “a bigger move in one weekend than all of Trump’s first-term trade actions combined.”
Despite Trump’s tough talk on China, Setser argues his policies suggest a different goal—redirecting Chinese demand toward U.S. goods rather than cutting ties.
Trump’s unpredictable trade policies, including his reversal on banning TikTok, have left investors struggling to anticipate the next move.
“Investors have whiplash,” said Tobin Marcus, head of U.S. policy at Wolfe Research. “It’s exhausting trying to plan beyond the next two days.”
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