Kate Andrews Kate Andrews

Can Trump defend his tariff calculations?

(Photo: Getty)

When President Trump held up an easel in the White House Rose Garden illustrating each country’s ‘tariffs charged to the USA’ and the new ‘U.S.A. discounted reciprocal tariffs’, there appeared to be some small print underneath the first column, barely readable. Then printed copies started to circulate the garden. Underneath the column showing each country’s ‘tariffs charged’, it read: ‘including currency manipulation and trade barriers’. 

It was clear that the figures published by the Trump Administration were their interpretation of tariff calculations. It was also immediately clear that some countries were going to dispute the figures. But exactly what had been calculated was not immediately obvious. The picture is still hazy – but the details that are emerging could end up being the biggest hurdle today for the President and his cabinet, as they set out on a press blitz to defend their new tariff regime.

That’s saying something. Markets were expected to be the President’s first immediate problem.

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