Saturday, April 26, 2025

Creating liberating content

Choose your language

hello@global-herald.net

Man City have hit...

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola faces one of the most important summer...

Trump: Putin ‘tapping me...

President Trump on Saturday said he thinks Russian President Vladimir Putin may...

VIDEO: Bear takes ride...

A family in West Simsbury, Connecticut, caught...
HomeEconomyOn Trump Tariffs,...

On Trump Tariffs, Kyiv Says ‘Chance to Negotiate Better Terms’


Ukraine exported goods worth $900 million to the US. Trump’s tariffs will mostly hit small enterprises.

US President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced tariffs on almost all countries in the world, including levies that exceed 30% on Asian economies such as China, Taiwan, Vietnam and Thailand.

The tariffs will be two-tiered. First, there will be a 10% baseline tariff on all countries. A higher reciprocal tariff will be charged on roughly 60 countries – those with which the US has the largest trade deficits. For instance, China’s total tariffs against the US were calculated by Trump’s team to be 67%, so the new tariffs would be half that, at 34%.

In a media event in the Rose Garden of the White House, Trump declared it to be “Liberation Day in America.”

Although economists cannot tell the future impacts of the tariffs, the only preliminary consequence is that they will initially be more hurtful to the US, escalating inflation, and acting as an additional tax on consumers.

Tariffs will result in a sharp price increase for US consumers, Yurii Gaidai, a senior economist at the Center for Economic Strategy wrote in his Facebook post.

“For many categories of American imports, substitution is either impossible or will be significantly delayed. For example, half of the spare parts for American automakers are imported. I’ve seen estimates suggesting that relocating the production of even 10% of these parts to the US would take three years and require over $100 billion in investments. And that’s just a small fraction of auto parts,” he wrote.

The price increase for goods will also lead to a drop in demand, he wrote.

A drop in demand will also worsen consumer sentiment. This will add up to a fall that was already reported by the University of Michigan, when consumer sentiment hit the lowest since November 2022.

“Overall, predicting all the effects accurately is difficult. But one thing is certain: the efficiency of the global economy will decline. Humanity’s overall prosperity will decline,” Gaidai wrote.

Source: Kyiv Post.

Other news from CES experts via the link



Source link

Get notified whenever we post something new!

spot_img

Create a website from scratch

Just drag and drop elements in a page to get started with Newspaper Theme.

Continue reading

Man City have hit gold on £111m-rated star who is worth more than Wirtz

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola faces one of the most important summer transfer windows since he arrived at the club nine years ago. So often the dominant club in England, as evidenced by their six...

Trump: Putin ‘tapping me along’ with Russia strikes on Ukraine

President Trump on Saturday said he thinks Russian President Vladimir Putin may be stringing him along after the latest deadly strikes on Ukraine, as the U.S. seeks to bring an end to the war in Eastern Europe. “There was...

VIDEO: Bear takes ride on child’s playset slide outside Connecticut home

A family in West Simsbury, Connecticut, caught the moment a bear climbed up their playset ladder and went down the slide, inciting a joyful shriek from a child in the background of the...

Enjoy exclusive access to all of our content

Get an online subscription and you can unlock any article you come across.