Home United States Trumpโ€™s Tariff Policy Baffles The World, Hits The Poor Hardest

Trumpโ€™s Tariff Policy Baffles The World, Hits The Poor Hardest

Economists across the world rushed to point out that the terms cancelled each other out in such a way that it could be reduced to a simple quotient of goods trade deficit over goods trade exports.

Mocked for imposing trade tariffs on frozen, sparsely inhabited islands dominated by penguins, Donald Trumpโ€˜s tariff calculation method has a significant impactโ€”it disproportionately affects some of the worldโ€™s poorest nations.

The math is simple: take the U.S. goods trade deficit with a country, divide it by that countryโ€™s exports to the U.S. and turn it into a percentage figure; then cut that figure in half to produce the U.S. โ€œreciprocalโ€ tariff, with a floor of 10%.

Thatโ€™s how the volcanic Australian territory of Heard Island and McDonald Islands in the Antarctic ended up with a 10% tariff. The penguins got off lightly, you might say.

But Madagascar โ€“ one of the poorest nations in the world with a gross domestic product (GDP) per head of just over $500 โ€“ meanwhile faces a 47% tariff on the modest $733 million of exports of vanilla, metals and apparel that it did with the U.S. last year.

โ€œPresumably no one is buying Teslas there,โ€ John Denton, head of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), told Reuters, an ironic reference to the improbability of Madagascar being able to placate Trump by buying upmarket U.S. products.

Madagascar is not alone: the bluntness of the formula as applied to economies which cannot afford to import much from the U.S. inevitably leads to a high reciprocal tally: 50% for Lesotho in Southern Africa, 49% for Cambodia in Southeast Asia.

โ€œThe biggest losers are Africa and Southeast Asia,โ€ said Denton, adding the move โ€œrisks further damaging the development prospects of countries already facing worsening terms of tradeโ€.

Rich Nations Also Stung

However, Trumpโ€™s trade tariff formula is also sowing confusion among rich countries. For the European Union, it has produced a punitive tariff of 20% โ€“ four times the 5% which the World Trade Organization calculates as the EUโ€™s average tariff rate.

โ€œSo, at least for us, it is a colossal inaccuracy,โ€ said Stefano Berni, General Manager of the consortium representing makers of the Grana Padano speciality cheese in Italy.

โ€œIt costs us three times as much today to enter the U.S. as it does for U.S. cheeses to enter our market,โ€ he said in a statement.


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Asked about Trumpโ€™s trade tariffsโ€™ methodology, White House Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai posted on X that โ€œwe literally calculated tariff and non-tariff barriersโ€ and included a screenshot of a White House paper setting out the algebra behind the formula.

Asked on CNBC how the Trump administration came up with the formula, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick did not directly explain it but said United States Trade Representative (USTR) economists had worked for years on a metric that reflected all trade barriers set up by a given country.

But economists across the world rushed to point out that the terms cancelled each other out in such a way that it could be reduced to a simple quotient of goods trade deficit over goods trade exports.

โ€œThere is really no methodology there,โ€ said Mary Lovely, Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute. โ€œIt is like finding you have cancer and finding the medication is based on your weight divided by your age. The word โ€˜reciprocalโ€™ is deeply misleading.โ€

Robert Kahn, managing director, global macro for Eurasia Group consultancy, agreed that it produced โ€œa lot of these kinds of nonsense numbers that arenโ€™t materialโ€.

โ€œIt sends a signal โ€ฆ that we are pulling back from our relationships and alliances with them and is a cold shower to a lot of our traditional allies,โ€ he told Reuters.

Others noted that it also raised questions over the widely held view that Trump is launching an opening gambit in what will be one-on-one discussions with individual countries that will ultimately see the new U.S. tariffs sharply reduced.

โ€œThe U.S. has chosen a methodology that is essentially mechanical,โ€ said Stephen Adams, a former European trade adviser who now works for Global Counsel consultancy.

โ€œOne practical question it does raise is whether thereโ€™s any scope to negotiate this away โ€ฆ The U.S. hasnโ€™t identified any specific measures that might be changed in order to convince the president to change his mind.โ€

(With inputs from Reuters)