President Donald Trump said Monday (3 Mar ’25) that 25 per cent taxes on
imports from Mexico and Canada would start Tuesday, sparking renewed fears of a
North American trade war that already showed signs of pushing up inflation and
hindering growth. “Tomorrow - tariffs 25% on Canada and 25% on Mexico. And that'll start,” Trump told reporters in the
Roosevelt Room. “They're going to have to have a tariff.” Trump has said the
tariffs are to force the two US neighbours to step up their fight against
fentanyl trafficking and stop illegal immigration. But Trump has also indicated
that he wants to even the trade imbalance with both countries as well and push
more factories to relocate in the United States.
His comments quickly rattled the US stock market,
with the S&P 500 index down 2 per cent in Monday afternoon trading. It's a
sign of the political and economic risks that Trump feels compelled to take,
given the possibility of higher inflation and the possible demise of a
decades-long trade partnership with Mexico and Canada. Yet the Trump administration remains confident that tariffs are the
best choice to boost US manufacturing and attract foreign investment. Commerce
Secretary Howard Lutnick said Monday that the computer chipmaker TSMC had
expanded its investment in the United States because of the possibility of
separate 25 per cent tariffs. In February, Trump put a 10 per cent tariff
on imports from China. He reemphasized Monday that the rate would be doubling
to 20 per cent on Tuesday.
Trump provided a one-month delay in February as
both Mexico and Canada promised concessions. But Trump said Monday that there was “no room left for Mexico or for
Canada” to avoid the steep new tariffs, which were also set to tax Canadian
energy products such as oil and electricity at a lower 10 per cent rate.
“If Trump is imposing tariffs, we are
ready," said Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly. "We are ready
with $155 billion worth of tariffs and we're ready with the first tranche of
tariffs, which is $30 billion.” Joly said Canada has a very strong border plan
and explained that to Trump administration officials last week. She said the
diplomatic efforts are continuing. She spoke after Trump made his comments
Tuesday.
Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum went into Monday
waiting to see what Trump would say. “It's a decision that depends on the
United States government, on the United States president,” Sheinbaum said ahead
of Trump's statement. “So whatever his decision is, we will make our decisions
and there is a plan, there is unity in Mexico.” Both countries have tried to show action in response to Trump's
concerns. Mexico sent 10,000 National Guard troops to their shared border
to crack down on drug trafficking and illegal immigration. Canada named a
fentanyl czar, even though smuggling of the drug from Canada into the United
States appears to be relatively modest.
As late as Sunday, it remained unclear what choice
Trump would make on tariff rates....Bessent
told CBS News on Sunday that China would “eat” the cost of the tariffs, instead
of passing them along to the US businesses and consumers that import their
products in the form of higher prices.
But
companies ranging from Ford to Walmart have warned about the negative impact
that tariffs could create for their businesses. Similarly, multiple analyses by
the Peterson Institute for International Economics and the Yale University
Budget Lab suggest that an average family could face price increases of more than
$1,000.. Eswar
Prasad, an economist at Cornell University... cautioned that some of the cost
increases from the tariffs would be offset by the US dollar increasing in
value. But a stronger dollar could also
make American made goods less competitive in foreign markets, possibly making
it harder for Trump to close the trade imbalance.
Trump also
plans to roll out what he calls “reciprocal” tariffs on April that would match
the rate charged by other countries, including any subsidies and and value
added taxes charged by those countries.
The US president has already announced the removal
of exemptions from his 2018 tariffs on steel and aluminium, in addition to
tariffs on autos, computer chips, copper and pharmaceutical drugs.