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Trump tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China in place on Saturday, says White House

31 Jan 2025 4 minute read
Donald Trump. Photo Anna Moneymaker

US President Donald Trump will put in place 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico and 10% tariffs on goods from China effective on Saturday, the White House said.

But it provided no word on whether there would be any exemptions to the measures that could result in swift price increases to US consumers.

Mr Trump had been threatening the tariffs to ensure greater co-operation from the countries on stopping illegal immigration and the smuggling of chemicals used for fentanyl, but he has also pledged to use tariffs to boost domestic manufacturing.

“Starting tomorrow, those tariffs will be in place,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters.

“These are promises made and promises kept by the president.”

Risks

The tariffs carry both political and economic risks for Mr Trump, who is just two weeks into his second term.

Many voters backed the Republican on the promise that he could tamp down inflation, but the possibility of tariffs could trigger higher prices and potentially disrupt the energy, car, lumber and agricultural sectors.

Mr Trump had said he was weighing issuing an exemption for Canadian and Mexican oil imports, but Ms Leavitt said she had no information to share on the president’s decision on any potential carveouts.

The United States imported almost 4.6 million barrels of oil daily from Canada in October and 563,000 barrels from Mexico, according to the Energy Information Administration.

US daily production during that month averaged nearly 13.5 million barrels a day.

Mr Trump has previously stated a 10% tariff on Chinese imports would be on top of other import taxes charged on products from the country.

Shortly after Ms Leavitt spoke, the S&P 500 stock index sold off and largely erased its gains on the day.

Trade conflict

Both Canada and Mexico have said they have prepared the option of retaliatory tariffs to be used if necessary, which in turn could trigger a wider trade conflict that economic analyses say could hurt growth and further accelerate inflation.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Friday that Canada is ready to respond if Mr Trump goes ahead with the tariffs, but he did not give details.

“We’re ready with a response, a purposeful, forceful but reasonable, immediate response,” he said.

“It’s not what we want, but if he moves forward, we will also act.”

Mr Trudeau said tariffs would have “disastrous consequences” for the US, putting American jobs at risk and causing prices to rise.

He reiterated that less than 1% of the fentanyl and illegal crossings into the US come from Canada.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Friday that Mexico has maintained a dialogue with Mr Trump’s team since before he returned to the White House, but she emphasised that Mexico has a “plan A, plan B, plan C for what the United States government decides”.

“Now it is very important that the Mexican people know that we are always going to defend the dignity of our people, we are always going to defend the respect of our sovereignty and a dialogue between equals, as we have always said, without subordination,” Ms Sheinbaum said.

Liu Pengyu, spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said the two countries should resolve their differences through dialogue and consultation.

“There is no winner in a trade war or tariff war, which serves the interests of neither side nor the world,” Mr Liu said in a statement.

“Despite the differences, our two countries share huge common interests and space for co-operation.”

A study this month by Warwick McKibbin and Marcus Noland, of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, concluded that the 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico and 10% tariffs on China “would damage all the economies involved, including the US”.

“For Mexico,” the study said, “a 25% tariff would be catastrophic. Moreover, the economic decline caused by the tariff could increase the incentives for Mexican immigrants to cross the border illegally into the US – directly contradicting another Trump administration priority.”


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Daniel Pitt
Daniel Pitt
17 days ago

Guess who’s getting excluded from future multilateral trade talks?

Adrian
Adrian
17 days ago
Reply to  Daniel Pitt

He doesn’t care: he’s all about USA first. You know, the opposite of our Prime Minister.

Rob
Rob
17 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

No he is Donald Trump first. How do tariffs benefit the consumer?

Steve A Duggan
Steve A Duggan
17 days ago

Trump is a bully – and Americans are going to hurt as a result. The EU (next in the line of fire), China, Mexico and Canada are not going to meekly backdown from the implementation of tariffs and a possible trade war as the Colombians recently did. No one wins from a trade war. But Trumps just a bullying businessman – not a politician.

Adrian
Adrian
17 days ago
Reply to  Steve A Duggan

just a bullying businessman – not a politician
That may well be his strength Steve. We’ll be able to judge over time how well it works and compare it to the UK’s progress under Starmer.

Jeff
Jeff
17 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

Trump loves bankruptcies when his businesses fail. He lost a casino, that is how good he is and now he has been handed the nations purse strings and let his nazi saluting owner get at the systems (musk is after the payment systems the US government uses).

beginning to look like a certain Austrian failed painter was not the last one we will see.

Baffling
Baffling
17 days ago

If Trump is right about tariffs, why have the Brexiteers got us signing tariff-free global trade deals with anyone and everyone who’ll undercut our own businesses and take all our steel jobs?

Adrian
Adrian
17 days ago
Reply to  Baffling

Well that wouldn’t be ‘Brexiteers’, it would governments – Tory & Labour. We have to rid our country of all that nasty CO2- emitting industry so we can pretend to have reduced our CO2 emissions: spoiler – we’ve actually just exported them. We’re doing all this so our politicians can look virtuous on the world stage. The ruination of the UK is small price to pay.

Baffling
Baffling
17 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

Why have the Brexiteers got us signing tariff-free global trade deals if Trump is right about tariffs?

Y Cymro
Y Cymro
17 days ago

Trump’s a moron. China won’t pay tariffs. It’s those American companies who manufacture their goods in China then import them back to the US who will. And the ones who will pay? The American consumer. 🙄

Adrian
Adrian
17 days ago
Reply to  Y Cymro

Whatever he is, Trump is not a moron.

FrankC
FrankC
17 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

There was a German bloke knocking around in the 1940’s you would have loved.

Adrian Bamford
Adrian Bamford
17 days ago
Reply to  FrankC

Oh for God’s sake grow up!

Rob
Rob
17 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

His response to the plane crash in Washington would say otherwise. Most leader would call for national unity when such a tragedy occurs. Instead Trump decides to blame it on DEI.

Jeff
Jeff
17 days ago

Ahhhh the consummate idiot trots off is rocker in public. Afraid of china though. Meanwhile he fired the prosecutors that investigated him, with this orange oaf, always look at what is going on in the background. The republican bloke that proposed the third term has had investigations into him dropped. Al Capone in orange tint.

Jeff
Jeff
17 days ago
Reply to  Jeff

And there we are, muskrat is after the government secure payments system and then mass fbi firings against employment rights involving people who ran investigations into jan 6. Reading this could massivly backfire on trump.

Adrian
Adrian
17 days ago
Reply to  Jeff

Love him or hate him, Trump’s path through life is not suggestive of someone who’s an idiot.

FrankC
FrankC
17 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

It really is you sad little man.

Jeff
Jeff
17 days ago
Reply to  Adrian

What, the bloke that knows the outcome to the airplane crash investigation already and with an expert on hand, said take bleach to fight Covid?

Yeah, real Mensa material there.

Jeff
Jeff
17 days ago

Wowsers! Musk is running the US government. What can go wrong. But tariffs, everyone look at tariffs ……
https://www.muellershewrote.com/p/fork-you-elon

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