Dubai Telegraph - What are reciprocal tariffs and who might be affected?

EUR -
AED 3.804756
AFN 76.006636
ALL 99.235032
AMD 408.126271
ANG 1.859973
AOA 946.272499
ARS 1089.969388
AUD 1.646411
AWG 1.865866
AZN 1.755868
BAM 1.955447
BBD 2.083734
BDT 125.387348
BGN 1.953884
BHD 0.390431
BIF 3055.362787
BMD 1.035873
BND 1.399254
BOB 7.131712
BRL 5.972637
BSD 1.032019
BTN 89.483834
BWP 14.304485
BYN 3.377097
BYR 20303.108181
BZD 2.073036
CAD 1.481039
CDF 2975.026922
CHF 0.945852
CLF 0.025956
CLP 996.042943
CNY 7.57191
CNH 7.577301
COP 4286.441921
CRC 525.107672
CUC 1.035873
CUP 27.450631
CVE 110.579528
CZK 25.100186
DJF 183.777687
DKK 7.458393
DOP 64.482817
DZD 140.312329
EGP 52.258956
ERN 15.538093
ETB 130.778728
FJD 2.415396
FKP 0.853131
GBP 0.832412
GEL 2.89042
GGP 0.853131
GHS 16.066424
GIP 0.853131
GMD 74.582428
GNF 8965.480258
GTQ 7.97256
GYD 216.450897
HKD 8.071006
HNL 26.60152
HRK 7.644274
HTG 135.166234
HUF 403.05587
IDR 16957.238822
ILS 3.721233
IMP 0.853131
INR 89.96043
IQD 1356.993455
IRR 43610.247626
ISK 146.596793
JEP 0.853131
JMD 162.49986
JOD 0.734848
JPY 159.084694
KES 133.783164
KGS 90.587421
KHR 4159.029568
KMF 492.195318
KPW 932.285695
KRW 1504.604788
KWD 0.319723
KYD 0.860045
KZT 522.275649
LAK 22504.338033
LBP 92762.414902
LKR 306.634606
LRD 204.636037
LSL 19.184046
LTL 3.058663
LVL 0.626589
LYD 5.101658
MAD 10.374298
MDL 19.42749
MGA 4878.961518
MKD 61.518886
MMK 3364.474663
MNT 3519.896111
MOP 8.283504
MRU 41.5903
MUR 48.519778
MVR 15.9625
MWK 1798.275051
MXN 21.313095
MYR 4.631358
MZN 66.202477
NAD 19.18436
NGN 1556.284681
NIO 38.068726
NOK 11.608799
NPR 143.174826
NZD 1.832029
OMR 0.39882
PAB 1.032014
PEN 3.844383
PGK 4.15279
PHP 60.261386
PKR 289.008423
PLN 4.174196
PYG 8135.569553
QAR 3.7711
RON 4.97695
RSD 117.086413
RUB 99.982355
RWF 1450.222013
SAR 3.884585
SBD 8.749981
SCR 15.587773
SDG 622.559323
SEK 11.251874
SGD 1.402712
SHP 0.853131
SLE 23.62116
SLL 21721.735989
SOS 592.003114
SRD 36.416085
STD 21440.476915
SVC 9.030369
SYP 13468.418993
SZL 19.18457
THB 35.381794
TJS 11.248968
TMT 3.635914
TND 3.303917
TOP 2.42612
TRY 37.349593
TTD 7.004735
TWD 34.033087
TZS 2680.34417
UAH 43.041132
UGX 3792.314907
USD 1.035873
UYU 44.831901
UZS 13455.988081
VES 63.137923
VND 26505.396968
VUV 122.980907
WST 2.901301
XAF 655.841686
XAG 0.032567
XAU 0.000359
XCD 2.799498
XDR 0.790161
XOF 658.294366
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.88025
ZAR 19.18053
ZMK 9324.098016
ZMW 28.870924
ZWL 333.55064
  • BCC

    0.0600

    123.32

    +0.05%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    7.69

    +1.04%

  • CMSC

    0.0450

    23.46

    +0.19%

  • RBGPF

    1.8700

    66.72

    +2.8%

  • AZN

    0.0700

    72.73

    +0.1%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    61.48

    -0.02%

  • GSK

    -0.4000

    36.07

    -1.11%

  • SCS

    0.2900

    11.98

    +2.42%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.89

    +0.29%

  • RIO

    -0.6000

    61.65

    -0.97%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.5

    -0.82%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.87

    +0.23%

  • RELX

    0.7700

    51.33

    +1.5%

  • BTI

    0.2200

    42.52

    +0.52%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    22.88

    +1.62%

  • BP

    0.1300

    34.55

    +0.38%

What are reciprocal tariffs and who might be affected?
What are reciprocal tariffs and who might be affected? / Photo: Patrick T. Fallon - AFP/File

What are reciprocal tariffs and who might be affected?

US President Donald Trump has threatened to open new fronts in his tariffs war by announcing reciprocal levies on other countries as soon as Tuesday, branding this "the only fair way" to trade.

Text size:

Trump's fresh salvo could bring a broad tariff hike to emerging market economies like India and take aim at European Union value-added taxes, fanning tensions with the bloc, analysts warn.

- What are reciprocal tariffs? -

Tariffs are taxes imposed on goods imported from another country.

As for reciprocal tariffs -- during election campaigning, Trump promised: "An eye for an eye, a tariff for a tariff, same exact amount."

And on Sunday, he said he would make a detailed announcement on the tariffs on Tuesday or Wednesday, adding that "every country will be reciprocal."

One approach is to hike tariff rates on imports to match the rate that other countries apply to US products, said Goldman Sachs analysts in a note.

Matching this based on different products would raise the United States' average tariff rate by around two percentage points. Doing so to match the average tariff imposed by countries raises the US rate by a smaller amount.

But taking a product-focused approach has complexities.

While Washington has relatively low average tariffs at a 2.7 percent rate in 2022, it has higher rates in "very politically sensitive" areas such as apparel, sugar and pick-up trucks, said Cato Institute vice president of general economics Scott Lincicome.

Similarly, including non-tariff barriers like regulations in the calculus would add to complications.

- Who will be impacted? -

Reciprocal tariffs may open the door to "a broad tariff hike" on emerging market economies who have high duties on US products, JPMorgan analysts expect.

If officials go by average tariff rates applied on all products, countries like India or Thailand -- which tax imports at higher average rates than the United States does -- could be affected.

Trump has previously slammed India as a "very big abuser" on trade and this week, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett told CNBC that India had high tariffs that lock out imports.

Lincicome cautioned that high tariffs are often also imposed by poorer countries, who use them as a tool for revenue and protection as they have fewer resources to impose non-tariff barriers like regulatory protectionism.

Goldman Sachs estimates that "there should be no effect on countries with free trade agreements like Mexico, Canada, and Korea, limiting the overall impact" if Washington took a country-based approach to reciprocal tariffs.

- What are the complications? -

It remains unclear if Trump views the policy of reciprocal tariffs as an alternative to a 10-20 percent universal tariff he floated on the campaign trail -- or a separate policy.

One risk is that the Trump administration "could attempt to equalize non-tariff barriers to trade," said Goldman Sachs in a note. In particular, he could consider value-added taxes (VATs) when deciding how much to adjust tariffs.

Doing so stands to raise the average effective tariff rate by another 10 percentage points, Goldman analysts added.

Such a move might also be a response to high European Union VATs, JPMorgan said.

- What is the goal? -

"One of the objectives is to create uncertainty as a negotiating tactic, but uncertainty is a tax on doing business," Jeffrey Schott, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told AFP.

Unpredictability surrounding tariffs, retaliation and non-trade issues all contribute to a situation that weighs on American and foreign firms, he said.

In the case of allies like Europe, Schott said, US objectives in negotiation could involve "economic and geopolitical priorities, including Ukraine."

They could include finding a better resolution of the situation in Ukraine, which has been fighting off a Russian invasion since 2022, but also to expand US exports in key sectors like LNG.

- Two-way street? -

The United States, however, does not have the lowest tariffs in the world and stands around the middle when it comes to wealthy, industrialized countries, said Cato's Lincicome.

"Should Trump's system be based on average tariff rates, then 'true' reciprocity would require US tariff rate reductions on goods from dozens of countries," he added in a recent report.

Y.Chaudhry--DT