
As Trump's tariff patience wanes, countries scrambling for deals face hard choice
Even as negotiators from Brussels to New Delhi are racing to find a way out of the punishing levies he has floated, Trump continued to send letters unilaterally setting rates – while still allowing for a little wiggle room.
Early on Saturday, Trump posted letters sent to Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, declaring a 30 per cent rate for Mexico and the European Union beginning August 1.
He said Mexico had failed to do enough to stop the flow of fentanyl into the United States and complained that the EU's trade deficit with the US was unfair. He suggested both partners could take steps to mitigate the rates – or he could increase them further if he did not like their responses.
Efforts by those countries and others to find an escape from the punishing levies are expected to intensify next week ahead of a new August 1 deadline for many of the import taxes to kick in.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is heading to Japan, and EU negotiators are focusing their attention on cars and agricultural tariffs in hopes of securing at least a provisional agreement.
Hashtags

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


South China Morning Post
5 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Filipino-Americans alarmed by Trump's remittance tax, lament ‘state extortion'
A new tax on international remittances introduced under US President Donald Trump 's sweeping economic reform bill is drawing criticism from Filipino-American communities, who say the measure will hit working-class migrants hardest and threaten the livelihoods of their families in the Philippines Under the new law, green card holders and migrant workers will be charged a 3.5 per cent levy on overseas money transfers starting on January 1 – a move that analysts warn will carry far-reaching consequences in both countries. 'For decades, Filipinos in the US have often been in the top five countries for remittances … the fact that those [remittances] will be taxed now is going to have an impact on how much they receive on their end and their livelihoods in the Philippines,' said James Zarsadiaz, director of the Yuchengco Philippine Studies Programme at the University of San Francisco. 'It's not just the Filipinos living here, but their family and their friends and their communities that rely on those remittances,' Zarsadiaz told This Week in Asia. In 2024 alone, Filipinos in the US sent more than US$14 billion to the Philippines, making them one of the top sources of overseas remittances for the Southeast Asian country. US President Donald Trump signs the One, Big Beautiful Bill Act into law on July 4 in Washington. Photo: TNS Zarsadiaz said the new tax fit a broader pattern in US politics of making immigration economically untenable.


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
India in a fix over Trump's tariff threat aimed at Russian oil
US President Donald Trump 's threat to impose steep secondary tariffs on countries trading with Russia has raised alarm in India over the future of its discounted oil purchases from Moscow, with analysts warning the issue could complicate negotiations on a bilateral trade deal with Washington. Trump vowed on Monday to impose 'very severe tariffs' if Russia did not end its war in Ukraine within 50 days. Washington would target Moscow's remaining trade partners with measures aimed at choking off support for the Kremlin's war machine, he added. Soon after starting his second term in January, Trump launched a bid at rapprochement with Russian President Vladimir Putin as he sought to honour his promise made during last year's US presidential election campaign to end the Ukraine war within 24 hours. But he has shown growing frustration over the impasse, with Putin stepping up attacks instead of halting the war. Trump's latest comments came shortly after Republican Senator Lindsey Graham and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal pushed for swift action against Moscow, including legislation that would allow the president to slap a 500 per cent tariff on imports from countries buying Russian uranium, gas and oil. The bill, which is gaining traction in the Senate, reflects the growing bipartisan appetite to squeeze Russia's wartime economy. But it also presents a potential dilemma for India and China – two of the largest importers of Russian oil. 'Tariffs of this size would significantly impair India's capacity to maintain this trade flow and could lead to increased inflation,' said Priya Walia, vice-president of commodity markets for oil at Rystad Energy.


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
EU chief for Asia-Pacific set to leave role after China summit, sources say
The European Union 's top official for Asia is to leave his role after a summit with China next week to take up a post in Sweden, the Post has learned. Niclas Kvarnström , managing director for Asia and the Pacific in the European External Action Service, the bloc's diplomatic corps, is returning to his homeland for a senior position in the government there, according to nine people familiar with the situation. A summit in Beijing on July 24 will be his last official engagement in the role, a fitting finale for a diplomat who has helped steer the EU through ever-trickier ties with China . A search will then begin for his successor, with deputy managing director Paola Pampaloni set to take the helm on an interim basis. Kvarnström, a fluent Chinese speaker, has become a respected and influential figure over two years working in the top Asia job in Brussels, before which he was head of the Asia-Pacific department of the Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. There, he played a key role in organising the EU's first Indo-Pacific summit in Stockholm in 2023. Another such summit is planned for November under the steer of the EEAS with assistance from the Danish government, which is the holder of the rotating EU presidency. One insider said the departure was 'quite sudden', while several suggested that the Swede would leave a big hole in the EU's small China policymaking machine, despite his relatively short stint there.