logo
Trump says tariffs delayed again, as few deals made with US trade partners before deadline

Trump says tariffs delayed again, as few deals made with US trade partners before deadline

The National4 hours ago
US President Donald Trump said he will start sending tariff letters to trade partners on Monday, and will delay enforcing the tariffs until August 1st, after three months of negotiating, with the White House having few deals to announce.
Mr Trump shocked trading partners with his ' Liberation Day ' announcement on April 2, where he announced a universal 10 per cent tariff on all countries plus harsher so-called reciprocal tariffs on those with which the US has a trade deficit. Mr Trump reversed course a week later after a rout in the bond market, announcing a 90-day pause to negotiate trade deals.
There's this sense that US policy has become erratic and inconsistent
Patrick Clawson,
director for research, Washington Institute for Near East Policy
The pause was meant to end on July 9, but just three days before the deadline US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Sunday that the tariffs will now go into effect August 1 for those countries that fail to reach a deal with the US.
"President Trump's going to be sending letters to some of our trading partners saying that if you don't move things along, then on August 1 you will boomerang back to your April 2 tariff level," said Mr Bessent at CNN's State of the Union address.
The August deadline is "not a new deadline' for negotiations, he added.
This yet another delay to the implementation of April's Liberation Day tariffs which experts say are adding to the confusion faced by the global economy.
'There's this sense that US policy has become erratic and inconsistent, and that's much harder for businesses to adjust to plan for hard to know what to do,' said Patrick Clawson, director for research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
'And so the reputation of the United States as a trading partner is going to be quite possibly more affected by the sense that US policy is inconsistent and erratic.'
Announced deals
Mr Trump most recently announced a deal with Vietnam, which had originally faced a 46 per cent reciprocal tariff. Under the deal, Vietnam would pay a 20 per cent tariff on all goods sent into the US and a 40 per cent tariff on transshipping.
Mr Trump also said Vietnam agreed to drop all tariffs on US imports.
There's this sense that US policy has become erratic and inconsistent, and that's much harder for businesses to adjust to plan for hard to know what to do
Patrick Clawson,
Washington Institute for Near East Policy
'In other words, they will open their market to the United States,' he wrote on his Truth Social media platform.
US goods imports from Vietnam totalled $136.6 billion last year, while goods exports to Vietnam were $13.1 billion, according to the Office of the US Trade Representative. The US goods trade deficit with Vietnam was $123.5 billion last year, up 18.1 per cent from 2023.
That followed an agreement between the US and UK, which was implemented in June. Under the agreement, UK car manufacturers can export to the US under a 10 per cent tariff, although this would apply to the first 100,000 cars each year. After that, vehicle exports fall under the full 27.5 per cent tariff. The 10 per cent tariff on aircraft engines and parts were removed.
However, a tariff on steel and aluminium could double from 25 to 50 per cent if the White House and No 10 do not reach a deal by July 9.
Largest trading partners yet to strike agreement
Two of the countries at the heart of Mr Trump's tariff policy – Mexico and Canada – are also two of America's largest trading partners.
Trade talks resumed between the US and Canada earlier this week after Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney agreed to drop a plan to tax US technology companies that drew the anger of Mr Trump. Mr Carney said on Sunday that the announcement would help support discussions being resumed by its July 21 deadline.
Relations between the US and its northern neighbour have been rocky since Mr Trump won back the White House last year.
American relations with Mexico have also been a roller-coaster in recent months. And both Mexico and Canada face a 25 per cent tariff for what Mr Trump said was to counter fentanyl smuggling.
Mexico has begun preliminary discussions with Brazil to deepen trade ties between the two countries as they seek to look beyond China and the US, the Financial Times reported.
'Right now, India does not accept anybody in. I think India is going to do that, and if they do that, we are going to have a deal for much less tariffs,' Mr Trump has said.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also told Fox News the administration was 'very close' to a trade deal with India.
The country could see its reciprocal tariff rate increase to 27 per cent once the deadline passes.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had visited Washington in February, where he and Mr trump agreed to negotiate the first phase of a bilateral trade agreement by autumn and set a new goal to double bilateral trade to $500 billion by 2030.
India agreed to a trade deal with the UK in May aimed at boosting economic ties between the two countries. The agreement aims to boost bilateral trade by an additional $34 billion a year by 2040 and lowers tariffs on advanced manufacturing parts and food products.
The EU and the US are also progressing towards the framework of a trade agreement, according to reports. The EU, subject to a 50 per cent reciprocal tariff from April 2, is willing to accept a deal in which a 10 per cent tariff would apply to exports, Bloomberg reported.
Meanwhile, Mr Trump cast doubt on a potential deal with Japan after accusing the country of being 'spoiled' from what he accused the country of ripping off the US for decades.
'I'm not sure if we're gonna make a deal, I doubt it, with Japan,' he said on Tuesday.
Japan was one of the countries hardest hit by Mr Trump's reciprocal tariffs, being charged a 24 per cent levy before he announced the 90-day pause.
Gulf Co-operation Council
Meanwhile, reciprocal tariffs are not expected to be a major source of consternations for Gulf states, with members of the Gulf Co-operation Council mostly spared from the harshest of the since-delayed duties.
'Currently it doesn't look like this deadline has much direct relevance for the GCC because none of them are subject to punitive tariffs in countries that have trade surpluses with the US,' Justin Alexander, director at Khalij Economics and a non-resident fellow at the Baker Institute, told The National.
The UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar have all been major players in investing in the US since Mr Trump's inauguration, highlighted by the President's visit to the region in May. Following his visit to the UAE, Mr Trump said total investments announced in the Gulf region topped $2 trillion.
'Given the importance of GCC investments and 'deals' for the Trump administration, one would think they have a fairly strong bargaining position, but we will see,' Mr Alexander said.
Economists have said that the region is more probable to feel the indirect impact of tariffs, notably through oil and gas prices.
China on separate deadline
China has a separate timeline following a 90-day pause announced on May 14.
Washington and Beijing had agreed to the framework of a trade deal in June that significantly lowered the tariff rates the two countries had announced on each other and led to concerns of a global economic slowdown.
Mr Trump also said at the time China would supply rare earth materials to the US as part of the deal.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jack Dorsey tests Bitchat — decentralized messaging without internet
Jack Dorsey tests Bitchat — decentralized messaging without internet

Crypto Insight

time12 minutes ago

  • Crypto Insight

Jack Dorsey tests Bitchat — decentralized messaging without internet

Block CEO and Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey has launched the beta version of a new decentralized peer-to-peer messaging service that runs entirely over Bluetooth. Jack Dorsey said his weekend was spent learning about 'Bluetooth mesh networks, relays, store and forward models, message encryption models, and a few other things' as he introduced Bitchat on X on Sunday. The 'Bluetooth mesh chat' system has 'IRC [Internet Relay Chat] vibes,' Dorsey added, harking back to the early days of web-based messaging systems in the late 1990s. His white paper goes into more detail about Bitchat, which is a decentralized messaging application that operates over Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) mesh networks. 'It provides ephemeral, encrypted communication without relying on internet infrastructure, making it resilient to network outages and censorship.' Completely decentralized and private According to the white paper, the network would be fully decentralized with no central servers, accounts, email addresses, phone numbers to register, or infrastructure dependencies. It provides 'ephemeral messaging,' whereby messages exist only in device memory by default and are not stored on a central database. There is also end-to-end encryption for an extra layer of security. Current popular messaging applications such as WhatsApp and Messenger are run by social media giants such as Meta, which are centralized, profit-driven corporations that use personal and message data as a product. Meanwhile, mesh networking enables automatic multi-hop message relaying, and room-based chat can be set up with hashtag-named group chats and optional password protection. A 'store-and-forward' system caches messages for offline peers for set time periods. In April, Cointelegraph reported that some popular social messaging apps could be spying on users, hoovering up personal information and messages. Bluetooth relays to hop messages Each device acts as both client and peripheral, creating a self-organizing mesh where messages can hop between devices to reach distant peers. The system uses a 30-meter Bluetooth range with bridge nodes connecting separate clusters. Messages are encrypted based on whether they are private, in a room, or broadcast, and large messages are fragmented into smaller 500-byte chunks. There are future plans to enable messaging over WiFi, which will increase the bandwidth for large messages. Multiple use cases The system has several use cases, such as conferences, protests, disaster areas, or any scenario where internet infrastructure is unavailable, unreliable, or untrusted. The paper concluded that Bitchat demonstrates that secure, private messaging is possible without centralized infrastructure, and stated: 'By combining Bluetooth mesh networking, end-to-end encryption, and privacy-preserving protocols, Bitchat provides resilient communication that works anywhere people gather, regardless of internet availability.' Dorsey is no stranger to messaging protocols, having served as the CEO of Twitter while founding the decentralized social messaging platform Bluesky in 2019. He left the Bluesky board without explanation in May 2024. Source:

Egypt-BRICS trade exchange hits $50.8bln in 2024
Egypt-BRICS trade exchange hits $50.8bln in 2024

Zawya

timean hour ago

  • Zawya

Egypt-BRICS trade exchange hits $50.8bln in 2024

Cairo – The bilateral trade between Egypt and the BRICS bloc reached $50.80 billion in 2024, an annual rise of 19.50% from $42.50 billion, according to the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS). Egypt's exports to BRICS nations increased by 10.60% last year to $9.4 billion from $8.50 billion in 2023. The Gulf region emerged as a major market for Egyptian goods, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE topping the list with $3.40 billion and $3.30 billion, respectively. On the other hand, the Arab Republic imported goods from the bloc valued at $41.40 billion in 2024, higher by 21.80% year-on-year (YoY) than $34 billion. China topped Egypt's dominant trade partner, supplying goods worth $15.50 billion, followed by Saudi Arabia with 7.90 billion. In fiscal year (FY) 2023/2024, the group pumped total investments in Egypt amounting to $40.60 billion. Meanwhile, the Egyptian investments in the BRICS countries reached $1.70 billion. Remittances from Egyptians working in the BRICS nations stood at $9.80 billion in FY 2023/2024, compared to $10.20 billion in FY 2022/2023.

Moira Forbes on Media's Next Chapter: Credibility and Community Take the Lead
Moira Forbes on Media's Next Chapter: Credibility and Community Take the Lead

Khaleej Times

timean hour ago

  • Khaleej Times

Moira Forbes on Media's Next Chapter: Credibility and Community Take the Lead

The media world has undergone a fundamental transformation. Breaking news – once the industry's ultimate prize – has been displaced by two elements that now command premium: trusted voices that create clarity from chaos, and engaged communities where audiences actively participate rather than passively consume. This shift from valuing speed to valuing curation and community represents nothing less than a complete reordering of media's hierarchy of value. For decades, major news organizations competed primarily on speed and exclusivity. First to publish, first to broadcast, first to alert. That competition made sense when information was scarce and distribution channels limited. But technological forces have completely upended this equation. Social media has democratized content creation, turning billions into potential publishers. Search engines have made virtually all recorded knowledge instantly accessible. And artificial intelligence now enables content generation at unprecedented scale. These technologies have created not just algorithms for distribution but entirely new ways of discovering, consuming, and engaging with information. This information abundance has brought tremendous benefits – greater access to knowledge, more diverse perspectives, and unprecedented opportunities for connection. Yet it has also created new complexities. As content proliferates across platforms, audiences increasingly struggle to distinguish credible information from noise and seek meaningful dialogue rather than endless streams of disconnected updates. For established media brands, this new reality presents both opportunity and risk. Institutional reputation alone no longer guarantees audience attention. Yet organizations with demonstrated records of accuracy and insight possess invaluable credibility in a fragmented landscape. Their task is leveraging that credibility while building genuine communities around their expertise. The media hierarchy has also fundamentally flattened. Independent voices with distinctive expertise, authentic perspective, or unique access now attract loyalty once reserved for major institutions. These creators succeed not through distribution scale but through perceptive analysis and direct audience relationships. Their ascendance requires established organizations to articulate value beyond their brand name, as audience loyalty no longer is exclusive to institutional identity. Geography adds another dimension to this transformation. While audiences access global information streams, they still seek perspectives that understand their specific cultural context. This creates opportunities for media that successfully bridge international perspective with local relevance. Artificial intelligence amplifies rather than diminishes the importance of human expertise. As AI makes basic content production effortless, human judgment becomes exponentially more valuable. While algorithms excel at information processing, they struggle with discernment, ethical reasoning, and contextual understanding – precisely what audiences increasingly seek. Similarly, while technology facilitates connection, meaningful community requires human guidance. Credibility and community have become the twin pillars of media value, each reinforcing the other. Trusted curation attracts audience participation; community engagement strengthens loyalty. Audiences increasingly value sources that expertly filter what matters and this shift fundamentally changes how they evaluate information sources. The question is no longer "Who's first?" but "Who makes sense of what matters?" In this new landscape, those who deliver both trusted guidance and meaningful connection will define media's next chapter.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store