President Donald Trump officially increased tariffs
on all steel and aluminium imports to 25 per cent on Wednesday, promising that
the taxes would help create US factory jobs at a time when his seesawing tariff
threats are jolting the stock market and raising fears of an economic slowdown. Trump removed all exemptions from his 2018
tariffs on the metals, in addition to increasing the tariffs on aluminium from
10 per cent. His moves, based off a February directive, are part of a broader
effort to disrupt and transform global commerce.
The Republican president has separate tariffs on
Canada, Mexico and China, with plans to also tax imports from the European
Union, Brazil and South Korea by charging “reciprocal” rates starting on April
2.
The EU announced its own
countermeasures on Wednesday (12 Mar ’25). European Commission President Ursula
von der Leyen said that as the United States was “applying tariffs worth 28
billion dollars, we are responding with countermeasures worth 26 billion
euros,” or about $28 billion.Those measures, which cover not just steel and
aluminium products but also textiles, home appliances and agricultural goods,
are due to take effect on April 1.
Canada...plans to impose retaliatory tariffs of
Canadian $29.8 billion ($20.7 billion) starting Thursday in response to the US
taxes on the metals. Canada's new tariffs would be on steel and aluminium
products, as well as US goods including computers, sports equipment and water
heaters worth $14.2 billion Canadian ($9.9 billion). “We will not stand idly by while our iconic steel and aluminium
industries are being unfairly targeted,” said Canadian Finance Minister Dominic
LeBlanc. Canada's new tariffs are in addition to its 25 per cent counter
tariffs on $30 billion Canadian (US$20.8 billion) of imports from the US that
were put in place on March 4 in response to other Trump import taxes that he's
partially delayed by a month.
Trump told CEOs in the
Business Roundtable on Tuesday that the tariffs were causing companies to
invest in US factories. The 8 per cent drop
in the S&P 500 stock index over the past month on fears of deteriorating
growth appears unlikely to dissuade him, as Trump argued that higher tariff
rates would be more effective at bringing back factories. “The higher it goes, the more likely it is they're going to build,”
Trump told the group. “The biggest win is if they move into our country and
produce jobs. That's a bigger win than the tariffs themselves, but the tariffs
are going to be throwing off a lot of money to this country.”
Trump on Tuesday threatened to put tariffs of 50
per cent on steel and aluminium from Canada, but he chose to stay with the 25
per cent rate after the province of Ontario suspended plans to put a surcharge
on electricity sold to Michigan, Minnesota and New York... Trump's 2018 tariffs on steel and aluminium were eroded by exemptions...While
Trump's tariffs could help steel and aluminium plants in the United States,
they could raise prices for the manufacturers that use the metals as raw
materials. Moreover, economists have found, the gains to the steel and
aluminium industries were more than offset by the cost they imposed on
“downstream'' manufacturers that use their products. At these downstream companies, production fell by nearly $3.5 billion
because of the tariffs in 2021, a loss that exceeded the $2.3 billion uptick in
production that year by aluminium producers and steelmakers, the US
International Trade Commission found in 2023...But the prospect of higher
prices, fewer sales and lower profits might cause some companies to refrain
from investing in new facilities. “If
you're an executive in the boardroom, are you really going to tell your board
it's the time to expand that assembly line?” said John Murphy, senior vice
president at the US Chamber of Commerce.
The top steel exporters to the US are Canada,
Mexico, Brazil, South Korea and Japan, with exports from Taiwan and Vietnam
growing at a fast pace, according to the International Trade Administration.
Imports from China, the world's largest steel producer, account for only a
small fraction of what the US buys. The
lion's share of US aluminium imports comes from Canada.