Donald Trump’s Rose Garden “Liberation Day” moment was a set piece event for the ages – an historic day he believes will kickstart a gradual American revival.
But at what immediate cost for the American people and countries globally?
In the first column, the tariffs Trump says are charged to America, calculated by undisclosed and very questionable White House arithmetic.
And in the next column, what Trump’s America will now levy.
He relished in what he saw in front of him. It felt like he was seeing some of the numbers for the first time.
Image: Donald Trump brandishing his tariff board.
Pic: AP
“China, first row…” he said. “European Union, they’re very tough… Vietnam… Taiwan… Japan… India, very very tough… Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia – ooh look at Cambodia, look, at 97%!” he said.
His commerce secretary, next to him, smiled with delight.
Some of the world’s poorest countries – with their own barriers in place surely only to protect their fledgling economies – will be hit so hard having already been crippled by the USAID cuts.
Beyond the Trumponomics though, there was also a distinct air of deception about it all.
Precisely how had his team calculated their numbers?
Take South Korea, with which the US has a trade agreement. It is not charging a 50% tariff on US exports as Trump’s charts claim. Is the EU really charging America a 39% tariff? No.
Team Trump’s maths adds undisclosed “currency manipulation” calculations and non-tariff barriers (of which the EU has many, to be fair) to the calculations.
But the numbers and the arithmetic are still hard to explain.
It’s been hit with the top rate of 50% tariffs based on a wild claim that it levies the US at 99%.
In fact, it’s part of a southern African trade pact with other nations which have been levied at lower levels.
Lesotho’s textile industry is heavily reliant on US exports. It’s a country where 56.2% of the population lives on less than $3.65 a day, according to the World Bank.
You don’t need to ‘do the maths’ to see the impact.
Nearly half of Lesotho’s exports are diamonds. Trump’s driver for all this is to bring manufacturing back home.
Is his sledgehammer on Lesotho going to conjure up a diamond industry in Pennsylvania?
The same principle could be applied elsewhere, like Indonesia and coffee. How’s the coffee growing trade in America?
You get the idea.
The White House arithmetic seems to be based simply on trade deficit calculations which themselves are the consequence of supply and demand.
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