Washington : The United States will double its tariffs
on imported steel and aluminum starting Wednesday, according to the White
House, as it published an order signed by President Donald Trump.
The move marks a latest salvo in Trump's trade wars,
bringing levies on both metals from 25 per cent to 50 per cent. But tariffs on
metal imports from the UK will remain at the 25 percent rate, while both sides
work out duties and quotas in line with the terms of their earlier trade pact.
Overall, the aim is to "more effectively counter
foreign countries that continue to offload low-priced, excess steel and
aluminum in the United States," according to the order, which added that
these undercut the competitiveness of US industries.
"Increasing the previously imposed tariffs will
provide greater support to these industries and reduce or eliminate the
national security threat posed by imports of steel and aluminum articles and
their derivative articles," the order added. Trump announced his decision
to hike tariffs on steel and aluminum when he addressed workers at a US Steel
plant in Pennsylvania last week.
"Nobody is going to be able to steal your
industry," he said at the time. "At 25 percent, they can sort of get
over that fence. At 50 percent, they can no longer get over the fence," he
added. The move, however, fans tensions with key US trading partners. The
European Union warned over the weekend that it was prepared to retaliate
against levies.
It said that the sudden announcement "undermines
ongoing efforts to reach a negotiated solution" between the bloc and the
United States.
Already, Washington is in talks with various countries after
Trump imposed sweeping 10 percent tariffs on almost all partners in April and
announced even higher rates for dozens of economies.
While the steeper levels have been paused during ongoing
negotiations, this halt expires in early July -- adding to urgency to reach
trade deals. Since returning to the presidency in January, Trump has imposed
sweeping tariffs on allies and adversaries alike in moves that have shaken
financial markets.
He has also imposed tariffs on sector-specific imports like
autos, apart from targeting steel and aluminum.
Mexico will request an exemption from the higher tariff,
Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard said, arguing that it is unfair because the
United States exports more steel to Mexico than it imports. "It makes no
sense to put a tariff on a product in which you have a surplus," Ebrard
said. Mexico is highly vulnerable to Trump's trade wars because 80 percent of
its exports go to the United States, its main trading partner.