The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 13, 2025
Today: April 13, 2025

Trump ups the ante on tariffs, vowing massive taxes on goods from Mexico, Canada and China on Day 1

Trump ups the ante on tariffs, vowing massive taxes on goods from Mexico, Canada and China on Day 1
November 26, 2024

(CNN) โ€” President-elect Donald Trump on Monday promised massive hikes in tariffs on goods coming from Mexico, Canada and China starting on the first day of his administration, a policy that could sharply increase costs for American businesses and consumers.

The move, Trump said, will be in retaliation for illegal immigration and โ€œcrime and drugsโ€ coming across the border.

โ€œOn January 20th, as one of my many first Executive Orders, I will sign all necessary documents to charge Mexico and Canada a 25% Tariff on ALL products coming into the United States, and its ridiculous Open Borders,โ€ Trump posted on his Truth Social platform. โ€œThis Tariff will remain in effect until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!โ€

Trump said Americaโ€™s neighbors can โ€œeasily solve this long simmering problem.โ€

Similarly, Trump said that China will face higher tariffs on its goods โ€“ by 10% above any existing tariffs โ€“ until it prevents the flow of illegal drugs into the United States.

โ€œI have had many talks with China about the massive amounts of drugs, in particular Fentanyl, being sent into the United States โ€“ But to no avail,โ€ Trump posted on Truth Social.

The president-elect claimed in the post that Chinese officials promised him the country would execute drug dealers caught funneling drugs into the United States but โ€œnever followed through.โ€

Responding to Trumpโ€™s announcement, Chinese Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said his country has been in communication with the US about counternarcotics operations and that โ€œthe idea of China knowingly allowing fentanyl precursors to flow into the United States runs completely counter to facts and reality.โ€

โ€œAbout the issue of US tariffs on China, China believes that China-Us economic and trade cooperation is mutually beneficial in nature. No one will win a trade war or a tariff war,โ€ Liu said in a statement to CNN.

Mexicoโ€™s President Claudia Sheinbaum responded Tuesday, warning the president-elect that โ€œneither threats nor tariffs will solve the issue of migration or drug consumption.โ€

โ€œImposing one tariff would mean another comes in response, continuing like this until we put shared companies at risk,โ€ she said, reading from a letter addressed to Trump.

Canadian officials responded to the announcement in a statement posted to X on Monday night, saying that their country โ€œplaces the highest priority on border security and the integrity of our shared borderโ€ and is โ€œessential to US domestic energy supply.โ€

โ€œWe will of course continue to discuss these issues with the incoming administration,โ€ Canadaโ€™s Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland and Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc said in the statement.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called Trump shortly after his social media post, an official with the prime ministerโ€™s office said. The brief call was focused on border security and trade, a senior Canadian government source told CNN. They characterized the call as productive and said that Trudeau and Trump promised to stay in touch in the days to come.

Trudeau confirmed the call in Ottawa before arriving at a Cabinet meeting, saying, โ€œThis is a relationship that we know takes a certain amount of working on and thatโ€™s what weโ€™ll do.โ€

โ€œWe obviously talked about laying out the facts, talking about how, how the intense and effective connections between our two countries flow back and forth,โ€ Trudeau said. โ€œWe talked about some of the challenges that we can work on together and it was a good call. Itโ€™s something that we can do laying out the facts moving forward in constructive ways.โ€

A significant policy change

The punishing tariffs, if enacted, could wreak havoc on Americaโ€™s supply chains and industries reliant on goods from the countryโ€™s closest trading partners.

โ€œThe measures proposed this evening could hit a number of strategic US industrial sectors hard, add approximately $272 billion a year to tax burdens, raise goods prices, lift interest rates, and sap strength in an already-vulnerable household sector,โ€ said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at Corpay Cross-Border Solutions.

Immediately after the announcement, the Canadian dollar fell 1.2% against the US dollar, and the Mexican peso fell 2% against the dollar, but both recovered some of their losses Tuesday morning. Chinaโ€™s yuan, though controlled by the government, traded higher โ€“ above 7.6% โ€“ in offshore markets.

Although investors believed the tariffs could ultimately strengthen the dollar, Americaโ€™s financial markets took a hit, too. The extraordinary tariffs would raise costs dramatically for Americans for everyday goods that had previously come over the border without any import taxes.

That stunning shift could stymie economic growth, especially if inflation-weary consumers spend less in the face of higher costs.

The Dow fell 50 points, or 0.1%, Tuesday. The broader S&P 500 and Nasdaq were slightly higher.

What America imports

The United Statesโ€™ top import from Canada is oil, which reached a record 4.3 million barrels per day in July, according to the US Energy Information Administration. America also imports cars, machinery and other various commodities, plastics and wood from Canada, according to the United Nationsโ€™ Comtrade.

America imports the majority of its cars and car parts from Mexico, which surpassed China as the top exporter to the US in 2023, according to trade data released by the Commerce Department earlier this year. Mexico is also a major supplier of electronics, machinery, oil and optical apparatus, and a significant amount of furniture and alcohol comes from the country into the United States.

The United States imports a significant amount of electronics from China, in addition to machinery, toys, games, sports equipment, furniture and plastics.

During Trumpโ€™s first term, CNN reported that he implemented tariffs on about $380 billion worth of goods that applied to thousands of Chinese-made products, including baseball hats, luggage, bicycles, TVs and sneakers. The Trump tariffs also hit foreign steel, aluminum, washing machines and solar panels.

Many US imports from Canada and Mexico are exempted from tariffs because of the USMCA trade agreement between the three nations that Trump pushed for during his first administration. Itโ€™s not clear how Trump would plan to implement the proposed tariffs without violating the USMCA.

Trump has routinely referenced the passage of the USMCA, which replaced NAFTA, as a political victory and a highlight of his presidency.

Trumpโ€™s tariff plan

Trump campaigned on using tariffs as a cudgel against foreign countries โ€“ as he did in his first administration โ€“ to grow domestic manufacturing while increasing tax revenue to pay for large revenue gaps that his proposed tax cut plan would create.

Tariffs effectively serve as a tax on goods imported to the United States. Although Trump has repeatedly said targeted foreign countries pay the tariffs, they are in fact paid by companies that purchase the imported goods โ€“ and those costs are typically passed onto American consumers. Most mainstream economists believe tariffs will be inflationary, and the Peterson Institute for International Economics has estimated Trumpโ€™s proposed tariffs (before the new tariffs announced Monday night) would cost the typical US household over $2,600 a year.

Scott Bessent, Trumpโ€™s pick for Treasury secretary, has said that tariffs would not add to inflation if they are implemented correctly. Wall Street cheered Bessentโ€™s appointment, because he is widely expected to roll out tariffs gradually.

Although Bessent, if confirmed by the Senate, will be partly responsible for implementing the tariffs, in coordination with the Commerce secretary and US Trade Representative, Trump as president would wield significant power to levy tariffs with the stroke of a pen. He did just that when he was last in the White House, placing large tariffs on goods, primarily from China.

The problem with tariffs is that they often result in retaliatory actions by targeted countries, kicking off a trade war โ€“ and thatโ€™s exactly what happened during Trumpโ€™s first term. That blunted the tariffsโ€™ effect on domestic manufacturing, because manufacturersโ€™ goods became less attractive to overseas buyers.

Trump has promised significantly larger tariffs during his second term. Although he continues to discuss many different numbers, he has proposed a tariff upward of 60% on all Chinese goods, as well as an across-the-board tariff of either 10% or 20% on all other imports into the US.

This story has been updated with additional context and developments.

CNNโ€™s Matt Egan, Paula Newton, Jack Guy and Jack Forrest contributed to this report.

The-CNN-Wire
โ„ข & ยฉ 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Related Articles

Smartphones and computers are now exempt from Trumpโ€™s latest tariffs Democrats dislike the 'chaos' of Trump's trade war but are OK with some tariffs That seat will cost how much? US businesses already seeing impact of Trump tariffs Trump trade team chases 90 deals in 90 days. Experts say good luck with that

Related

Business|Economy|Political|US

Trump has begun another trade war. Here's a timeline of how we got here

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

Trump has begun another trade war. Here's a timeline of how we got here

Business|Economy|Europe|Political|World

Canada and the EU swiftly retaliate against Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs

Asia|Business|Economy|Political|US|World

India's trade minister heads to US for talks as Trump tariffs loom, officials say

Business|Economy|Education|Finance|Political

Brazil's inflation index posts largest monthly rise since early 2022

Business|Economy|MidEast|Political|World

Wars dent Israel's economy in 2024 but military spending keeps growth at 1%

Local

News|Local

Southern California Edison announces plan to underground power lines

News|Local

Disney to leave historic Fox Studio Lot, ending legacy

News|Local

Palisades Recreation Center to be rebuilt

Arts|Celebrity|Entertainment|Local|News|WrittenByLAPost

Weezer bassist to play Coachella despite wifeโ€™s arrest

Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Europe|Finance|Political

Britain makes $26 billion export finance support available amid tariff turmoil

Britain makes $26 billion export finance support available amid tariff turmoil
Americas|Business|Economy|Finance|US

KKR nears deal to buy OSTTRA for about $3 billion, Bloomberg News reports

KKR nears deal to buy OSTTRA for about $3 billion, Bloomberg News reports
Business|Economy|Europe|Finance|Political

UK finance minister eyes closer EU ties, warns 'profound' impact of tariffs

UK finance minister eyes closer EU ties, warns 'profound' impact of tariffs
Business|Technology|Travel|US

A helicopter crash left a Siemens executive, his family and their pilot dead. Hereโ€™s what we know

A helicopter crash left a Siemens executive, his family and their pilot dead. Hereโ€™s what we know

Economy

Business|Economy|MidEast|Political|World

Syrian officials plan to attend IMF, World Bank meetings in Washington DC, sources say

Syrian officials plan to attend IMF, World Bank meetings in Washington DC, sources say
Business|Economy|Political|US

US appeals court allows layoffs, but not dismantling of consumer watchdog

US appeals court allows layoffs, but not dismantling of consumer watchdog
Economy|Political|Technology|US

Trump spares smartphones, computers, other electronics from China tariffs

Trump spares smartphones, computers, other electronics from China tariffs
Economy|MidEast|Political|US|World

Iran and US envoys hold 1st negotiation over Tehran's nuclear program, and talk face-to-face

Iran and US envoys hold 1st negotiation over Tehran's nuclear program, and talk face-to-face

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In