Aluminum & Steel From Mexico and Canada To Enter the U.S. With a 50% Tariff
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U.S. President Donald Trump. X/ @MichaelOngRisk
February 12, 2025 Hour: 3:00 pm
Besides Trump’s 25% tariff, Canadian and Mexican products will be subject to another tax that will come into effect in March.
On Wednesday, the White House announced that tariffs on aluminum and steel imported from Mexico and Canada will effectively be 50 percent.
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That will happen because the 25% tariff established by President Donald Trump will be added to other taxes on Canadian and Mexican goods that will go into effect on March 4.
In this way, Mexico and Canada will face higher tariffs than other countries that export aluminum and steel to the US, which will only be subject to the 25% tax announced by Trump.
These 25% US tariffs applicable to all countries that export aluminum and steel will go into effect on March 12, according to the text of the executive orders that Trump signed on Monday.
Previously, the Trump claimed that the move would make America rich again and bring businesses and jobs back to the country. But how will the steel and aluminum tariffs actually impact the U.S. economy?
“What this means is that U.S. steel and aluminum prices will be substantially higher than world prices for the foreseeable future. That spells harm for a large number of downstream industries that use steel and aluminum. Those downstream industries employ about 10 times as many workers as the steel and aluminum industries,” said Gary Clyde Hufbauer, a nonresident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
The veteran trade expert said that some steel and aluminum firms could benefit, but a great many more will lose out, including auto firms (such as GM, Ford, Toyota), electrical machinery firms (such as General Electric, Schneider Electric), as well as aircraft manufacturers (such as Boeing).
Some economists caution that the new U.S. tariffs may increase inflation, adding to the financial strain already faced by many U.S. businesses and ordinary Americans.
“In the short-term we will be paying more for steel and aluminum and everything made with them, most importantly cars,” said Dean Baker, a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research. In the long term, manufacturers will be reluctant to spend too much money since they do not know if the tariffs will remain in place for a long time, he added.
During his first term, Trump imposed tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum imports in 2018, citing national security concerns. He later allowed certain trading partners, including Canada, Mexico and Brazil, to receive duty-free quotas.
Under former President Joe Biden, the United States continued some tariff exemptions introduced under Trump and extended new quotas for the European Union, Britain and Japan. But in the latest statement Tuesday, Trump said that there will be “no exceptions” for steel and aluminum tariffs.
A 2019 study published by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York showed that Trump’s 2018 widespread tariffs on steel and aluminum, as well as tariffs on Chinese goods, along with the countermeasures they triggered, led to a loss of manufacturing jobs in the United States. “I expect the same outcome, but worse, this time,” said Hufbauer of the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Since the beginning of his second term, Trump has quickly rolled out trade protectionist measures, which have been widely opposed both domestically and internationally.
“The tariffs Trump imposed during his first term were more targeted. This time around, more Americans will feel the impact. Among the imports affected are a whole slew of consumer goods, including footwear, toys, video game consoles and electronics,” according to a report by National Public Radio.
“So iPhones, iPads, tablets, laptops — all of that from Apple would now be hit, which is kind of a big escalation compared to how consumer goods were shielded from most of the first trade war tariffs,” says Erica York, vice president of federal tax policy at the Tax Foundation.
When signing proclamations on Monday, Trump also said that his administration was weighing so-called “reciprocal tariffs” on products such as chips, cars and pharmaceuticals, signaling more moves in the tariff arena.
Despite his pledge to reduce inflation during his campaign, Trump’s tariffs are expected to drive up inflation and complicate the Federal Reserve’s rate-cutting path going forward. The FED has slowed its pace of interest rate cuts as it braces for uncertainty caused by the Trump administration’s policies.
When asked about the Trump administration’s new policies, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said after the Jan. 28-29 meeting that the Federal Open Market Committee is “very much in the mode of waiting to see” what policies are enacted.
“We don’t know what will happen with tariffs, with immigration, with fiscal policy, and with regulatory policy,” Powell said.
teleSUR/ JF Sources: EFE – Xinhua