Trump says countries will face tariffs ranging from 15% to 50%
'We'll have a straight, simple tariff of anywhere between 15% and 50%,' Trump said Wednesday at an AI summit in Washington. 'A couple of — we have 50 because we haven't been getting along with those countries too well.'
Trump's comment declaring that the tariffs would begin at 15% represented the latest twist in his effort to impose duties on nearly every US trading partner, and the latest indication that Trump was looking to more aggressively impose the levies on exports from countries outside the small group that so far has been able to broker trade frameworks with Washington.
Trump earlier this month said that more than 150 countries would receive a letter including a tariff rate of 'probably 10 or 15%, we haven't decided yet.' Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CBS News on Sunday that small countries including 'the Latin American countries, the Caribbean countries, many countries in Africa' would have a baseline tariff of 10%. And at the first announcement of the tariffs in April, Trump unveiled a universal tariff of 10% on nearly every country.
While Trump and his advisers initially expressed hopes of securing multiple deals, the president has been touting the tariff letters themselves as 'deals' and suggesting that he is uninterested in back-and-forth negotiations. Still, he has left the door open for countries to make agreements that could lower those rates.
On Tuesday, Trump announced he was reducing a threatened 25% tariff on Japan to 15% in exchange for the country removing restrictions on some US products as well as offering to back a $550 billion investment fund.
The White House has also discussed a similar fund with South Korea, a nation also focused on reaching a 15% rate including on autos, according to people familiar with the matter. And the Philippines is aiming to bring down its own tariff rate to the 15% level from the current 19% rate, according to the country's Ambassador to the US Jose Manuel Romualdez.
Meantime, officials in Vietnam are weighing the likely cost of their deal. Hanoi estimates its exports to the US could decline by as much as a third if higher tariffs announced by Trump take effect, an internal government assessment shows.
Other nations, including India and members of the European Union, are still pushing for an agreements before the heightened tariffs go into effect.
On Wednesday, Trump said he would 'have a very, very simple tariff for some of the countries' because there were so many nations that 'you can't negotiate deals with everyone.' He said talks with the European Union were 'serious.'
'If they agree to open up the union to American businesses, then we will let them pay a lower tariff,' Trump said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
19 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Dr Alok Kumar Rai takes charge as IIM Calcutta Director
Dr Alok Kumar Rai on Wednesday officially took over as the new Director of the Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Calcutta on Wednesday, becoming the fourth person to hold the post in the last three years. The appointment was announced by Shrikrishna Kulkarni, Chairperson of the IIM Calcutta Board of Governors. 'On behalf of the Board of Governors of IIM Calcutta and the entire IIM Calcutta community, it is my privilege to welcome Dr Alok Kumar Rai as our next Director,' Kulkarni said. 'As the former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Lucknow, he comes to IIM Calcutta with a strong commitment to academic and research excellence, infrastructure development and good governance.' Dr Rai began his academic career as a professor at Banaras Hindu University (BHU). During his tenure as Vice-Chancellor, Lucknow University had become the first institution in the state of Uttar Pradesh to receive an A++ grade accreditation from the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC). In this position, he succeeds Professor Saibal Chattopadhyay, who had been the acting director-in-charge since January 2024. The statement said, 'The Institute looks forward to his leadership in steering IIM Calcutta through its next phase of growth, especially in an era of global transformation and AI-driven change.' The appointment of Rai marks a return to full-time leadership at the premier business school after months of interim arrangements. The institute's first woman director, Anju Seth, resigned in March 2021, three years into her five-year term. Her successor, Uttam Kumar Sarkar, stepped down in August 2023 after a little over two years. In November 2023, Professor Sahadeb Sarkar was appointed director-in-charge but exited in January 2024. Since then, Professor Saibal Chattopadhyay had been serving as the acting director while the process to appoint a regular director was underway.


Economic Times
19 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Tariff worries trigger rupee's steepest fall in nearly three months
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel The Indian rupee posted its steepest one-day drop since May and hit a five-month low on Wednesday, hurt by worries over steep U.S. tariffs on Indian exports alongside dollar demand from foreign banks and rupee hit a low of 87.5125 against the U.S. dollar before closing at 87.42, down 0.7% on the said that while the Reserve Bank of India likely stepped in to support the local currency, the intervention was not very aggressive.A 20%-25% tariff may be imposed on India's exports in the absence of a trade deal and as the Asian country holds off on offering fresh concessions ahead of Friday's deadline, Reuters reported on Tuesday.U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that a trade deal with India had not been finalised and higher tariffs were tariff threats, the psychological impact of the rupee breaching the 87 mark, and urgency among importers to hedge before the August 1 deadline has weighed on the rupee, said Dilip Parmar, a foreign exchange analyst at HDFC conditions remain the same, the rupee could fall below 88 in the coming weeks, Parmar said. The local unit had hit an all-time low of 87.95 in addition to trade uncertainty, persistent foreign portfolio outflows have also been a pain point for the rupee. Overseas investors have net sold over $1.5 billion of local stocks in among importers and the absence of inflows have kept the currency under pressure and that may persist in the near-term, a trader at a foreign bank Asian currencies were trading mixed and the dollar index was little changed at 98.8 as investors await the Federal Reserve's policy decision later in the Fed is widely expected to keep rates unchanged, with the focus on commentary from Chair Jerome Powell and whether the decision is unanimous.

Business Standard
19 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Rupee hits five-month low on US tariff warning, oil spike; ends at 87.42/$
The Indian Rupee weakened to its lowest level in over five months on Wednesday as sentiment soured following higher-than-expected tariff remarks by the US President and a surge in oil prices. The domestic currency closed 60 paise lower at 87.42 against the dollar on Wednesday, the lowest level since February 28 this year, according to Bloomberg. The local unit has depreciated 1.9 per cent so far this month and 2.12 per cent in this calendar year so far. This is so far the worst monthly fall since September 2022, when it fell 2.32 per cent. The weakness in currency came after Trump's statement that India may face a tariff rate of 20 to 25 per cent. He, however, cautioned that the final levy still was not finalised. India is racing to finalise a trade deal with the US as the 1 August deadline approaches. Officials from both countries are engaged in continuous negotiations, although major disagreements remain unresolved. Rupee traded weak, breaching the 87.40 mark as rising crude prices and a stronger dollar index weighed on sentiment, according to Jateen Trivedi, VP Research Analyst - Commodity and Currency, LKP Securities. Market participants remain cautious ahead of the US Federal Reserve's policy announcement tonight, with additional key US data lined up this week likely to keep volatility elevated, he said. "The rupee is expected to trade within a broader range of 87.00-87.70." Adding to the downward pressure are persistent foreign portfolio investor (FPI) outflows from Indian equities, with capital being redirected toward developed markets that are currently trading at record highs, analysts noted. FPIs have sold Indian equities for the seventh straight session in the secondary market, according to data from NSE. On Tuesday, FPIs offloaded stocks worth ₹4,636.60 crore. In the last seven sessions, global funds have sold stocks worth ₹24271.98 crore. The dollar index is poised for the best month this year, with the measure of the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, down 0.05 per cent at 98.83.