White House: No delay to Canada or Mexico tariffs, Feb. 1 still the target
https://www.axios.com/2025/01/31/trump-tariffs-canada-mexico-feb-1-march-1
The White House said it
will still roll out 25% tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada, alongside 10%
tariffs on China, on Feb. 1 — and threatened future tariffs on other imports
from around the globe.
Why it
matters: The tariffs would
likely spark retaliation of an unknown magnitude, risking economic pain for
businesses and consumers.
What they're
saying: "There could be
some temporary, short-term disruption, and people will understand that,"
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Friday when asked if tariffs would
raise prices — which he said they do not.
- Many economists say the opposite is true: New
analysis by the Tax Foundation said the proposed tariffs on China, Canada
and Mexico would be an effective tax
increase on U.S. households of $830 this year alone.
- Asked whether he was worried how financial
markets would react to tariffs, Trump said simply: "No."
Between the lines: Trump also said he would "absolutely"
impose tariffs on the European Union, though he offered few details.
- He said that the administration would
"eventually" put tariffs on chips, steel, aluminum, copper and
pharmaceuticals.
Catch up
quick: Reuters reported
earlier on Friday that the White House would push off tariff implementation on
China, Mexico and Canada until March 1 — leaving a window for negotiation that
could kill the plan altogether.
- "I saw that report and it is false,"
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said during a press briefing.
The big
picture: There was whiplash
across financial markets Friday after the report of the delay, the denial and
then Trump's Oval Office statements.
- The U.S. dollar, which weakened on the initial
delay report, immediately surged against both the Canadian dollar and the
Mexican peso as Leavitt spoke.
- Tariffs lead to a stronger dollar, and the
currency pairs have been incredibly sensitive to headlines in recent days.
What to watch: Trump's moves would further rattle trade relations
with the top U.S. trade partners in one fell swoop. It is unclear which imports
might be excluded, though Trump said crude oil from Canada would likely face
lower tariffs.
- "Probably going to reduce the tariff a
little bit on that," Trump said.
- A U.S. tariff would "set aside" the
free trade agreement with Mexico and Canada known as USMCA, Mexican
President Claudia Sheinbaum reportedly told a
news conference.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario