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Trump announces sweeping range of reciprocal tariffs, 10% worldwide tariff in ‘Liberation Day’ proclamation

Donald Trump unveiled and then enacted a two-step tariff approach Wednesday as his long-awaited “Liberation Day” plans were released during a Rose Garden event at the White House.

The president is imposing a baseline tariff rate of 10% on all countries that will go into effect on April 5. On top of that, additional tariffs are to be added on top for some of what the administration considers the worst offenders, which will follow on April 9.

Read more: The latest news and updates on Trump’s tariffs

The president said those additional rates were calculated based on both tariffs and non-tariff barriers that he has long bemoaned.

The president held up a chart at the event with the additional rates he has planned. Atop the list was China, which is set to receive a 34% tariff. The European Union was second on the list, in line for 20% duties.

To the many clamoring for protection, Trump said, “I say terminate your own tariffs and drop your barriers.”

Trump said the tariff calculations were actually only half of the cheating his team has found, saying he could have gone higher. He called his approach Wednesday “kind reciprocal.”

The tariffs will be enacted by Trump declaring a national emergency based on chronic trade deficits, using a 1977 law called the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

It’s the same law that Trump has used since taking office to impose duties on Canada, Mexico, and China over illegal immigration and drugs.

Trump released his long awaited plan before the vice president, top cabinet officials, congressional leaders as well as workers he said will benefit from his policies.

The dramatic move, if it holds, could reorient the global trading system and represents the climax of Trump’s decades-long focus on tariffs and unfair trading relationship that he says has led to America being ripped off.

“There will be complaints from the globalists,” Trump added Wednesday, claiming “every prediction our opponents have made for 30 years have been wrong.”

Wednesday’s announcement marks a middle ground of sorts between competing tariff approaches that the president and his team had been weighing and have been debated within the administration in recent weeks.

President Donald Trump holds a signed executive order after delivering remarks on reciprocal tariffs during an event in the Rose Garden on April 2. (SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images) ¡ SAUL LOEB via Getty Images

One early plan had focused on levying differing duties for each country while another focused on a flat universal rate that Trump had pushed on the 2024 campaign trail.

Wednesday’s highly anticipated unveiling comes at a delicate moment for the economy and markets, with stocks facing volatility for weeks on ever-changing tariff news and also few indications that this week’s announcement will quickly end the investor uncertainty.


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