Starmer vows to act in UK’s interest

Starmer vows to act in UK’s interest

Norway will seek to negotiate with the United States, the Norwegian prime minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, told the public broadcaster NRK on Thursday.

Trump announced a 15 per cent tariff on goods imported to the US from Norway.

“This is bad news, it is very serious,” Støre told NRK.

“There is an opening for negotiations here, the Americans say, and we will use that in every possible way that we can.”

Norway, which is not a member of the European Union, has said it is lobbying EU policymakers to prevent what it called a worst-case scenario in which Norwegian exports to Europe could become negatively affected by a union response to US tariffs.

Afghanistan gets same tariff as UK

“Even the Taliban got a better deal than Starmer,” an SNP official has complained.

According to figures provided by the Trump administration, Afghanistan charges 49 per cent tariffs on the US (including other trade barriers) but is being charged the same reciprocal tariff as the UK — 10 per cent — despite the UK being listed as charging 10 per cent on the US. The official was speaking to Politico.

‘Cruel’ rate imposed on small African nation

The small African nation Trump said “nobody has ever heard of” will be among the countries most affected by new US tariffs.

Lesotho, a landlocked kingdom encircled by South Africa, has been hit with a 50 per cent reciprocal tariff by the US, a measure that will significantly impact the economy of one of the world’s least developed countries.

America primarily buys diamonds as well as suits and other clothing from Lesotho, which exported $223 million to the US in 2023, according to the Observatory of Economic Complexity. That accounts for some 10 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

The 50 per cent tariffs on Lesotho are “cruel,” Charlie Robertson, head of macro strategy at the emerging and frontier markets fund manager FIM Partners, wrote in a post on social media site X. “It’s going to knock their GDP by at least 1 per cent.”

How did Trump calculate tariffs?

Trump has introduced a new baseline 10 per cent US tariff on goods from all countries and higher reciprocal tariff rates for countries that his administration says have high barriers to US imports.

The numbers, he said, are “approximately half of what they are and have been charging us”, pointing out the steeper rates are tailored to those countries Washington deemed as bad actors.

Trump’s reciprocal rates are meant to capture not only how much other countries tax US exports, but also non-monetary tariffs including policies such as restrictions on trading, currency manipulation, lax pollution, labour laws and burdensome regulations that keep US products out of foreign markets.

There are some exemptions, as goods like copper, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, lumber, gold, energy and “certain minerals” will not be subject to reciprocal tariffs, according to a White House fact sheet.

Tariffs are economic declaration of war, says German MEP

Germany’s vice-chancellor and economics minister has warned that the Trump administration’s “tariff mania” risks giving rise to a spiral of retaliation that could “drag countries into recession and cause massive damage around the world”.

“For consumers in the US, the day will not be Liberation Day, but rather Inflation Day,” Robert Habeck said.

Bernd Lange, a German Social Democratic MEP who leads the European parliament’s trade committee, said the package amounted to an economic “declaration of war” and would cause tens of billions of euros’ worth of damage to the EU.

Southeast Asian countries hit with high tariffs

Currency traders assess the fallout in South Korea

AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP

Six of the nine Southeast Asian countries listed by Trump were slapped with much bigger-than-expected tariffs of between 32 per cent and 49 per cent.

Pham Minh Chinh, the Vietnamese prime minister, created a task force to address the situation after an urgent cabinet meeting early on Thursday, state media said. He noted the country’s 8 per cent growth target for this year remained unchanged.

Thailand’s prime minister, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, said she hopes to bring down the 37 per cent rate imposed on her country, which was far greater than the 11 per cent it had expected.

“We have to negotiate and get into details,” she said. “We can’t let it get to where we miss our GDP target.”

Malaysia, which was given a tariff rate of 24 per cent on exports into the US, announced it would not seek retaliatory tariffs and it said the trade ministry would be actively engaging with US authorities “to seek solutions that will uphold the spirit of free and fair trade.”

UK ‘given special rate’ thanks to Brexit

The UK was given a “special rate” on tariffs thanks to Brexit, an adviser to Donald Trump has said

Seb Gorka, a White House adviser on counterterrorism, said the tariff on British goods could “improve”.

“After Brexit, you’ve reaffirmed your independence, and I think that is being proven today by the special rate that has been afforded to the UK,” he told BBC’s Newsnight.

He added that there was “nothing to say that the current rate … could not improve. It is the beginning.”

Analysis: the real test of Starmer’s diplomacy is yet to come

Sir Keir Starmer will try to reassure British businesses at a meeting in Downing Street this morning.

The prime minister can breathe a sigh of relief that British goods were hit with a 10 per cent tariff, lower than the 20 per cent levy imposed on EU exports.

Trump appears to have applied a sweeping formula: dividing the US trade deficit with a country by the imports from that country. Then, Trump halved the number produced because he was being “kind”. For those countries with a trade surplus, he simply imposed a 10 per cent tariff.

Given the blanket approach adopted by Trump, it appears that Britain was treated no differently from the rest of the world and the real test of Starmer’s diplomacy will come in the weeks ahead.

Britain is trying to negotiate a bespoke trade deal with the US, focussing on technology and AI.

Starmer could also offer to lower tariffs on US beef, chicken and other meat— without changing standards to allow imports of hormone-treated beef and chlorine-washed chicken. In exchange, he will hope that Trump drops the tariffs on British goods.

Reynolds: US have an argument about barriers to trade

The business secretary said the 10 per cent tariff on the UK is “not a fair reflection” of our trade.

Jonathan Reynolds told BBC Breakfast that the average tariff the UK has in place on US goods is “about 4 per cent”.

But Reynolds also acknowledged that the US “have an argument that there are other barriers to trade”.

“For example we have a food standards regime in the UK which they have some objections to,” he noted.

However, he added that the two countries have a “strong trading relationship” which is “fair and balanced”.

France to continue negotiations with Washington

The French government spokeswoman, Sophie Primas, said this morning that France would continue to try to negotiate with Washington “because we are not the ones who started this commercial war”.

“There will first be discussion and then the riposte,” Primas, a government minister, told RTL radio. “With President Trump, you have to get into a trial of strength”

Just before the announcements of the tariffs, President Macron said he hoped Trump would reverse his decisions, which were “not a good idea politically or geopolitically”.

“There’s a paradox in the main allies of the United States becoming the first ones to be taxed,” he added.

Starmer: ‘Nothing is off the table’

Sir Keir Starmer vowed to “fight for the best deal for Britain”.

Addressing business chiefs including AstraZeneca’s Pascal Soriot, BAE’s Charles Woodburn and Jaguar Land Rover’s Richard Molyneux, he repeated that “nobody wins in a trade war” and negotiations on an economic deal continue.

“Our intention remains to secure a deal, but nothing is off the table,” he said.

“We have a range of levers at our disposal and we will continue our work with businesses across the country to discuss their assessment of the options.”

Jonathan Reynolds: America is a friend

The business secretary said being an open trading nation is “really important to our prosperity”.

He told Sky News: “America is a friend, America is our principal ally. We might not agree and don’t agree with all of these decisions but you’ve got to understand where they’re coming from and when you have that you have the basis for a constructive conversation that will get the best for the UK.”

Macron pushes for robust riposte from Brussels

President Macron has called an emergency meeting of business leaders at the Élysée Palace to assess the damage to France from the tariffs President Trump has slapped on Europe.

Paris is pushing for a robust riposte from Brussels to tariffs that will hit French drink and agricultural exports hard as well as industrial goods. Sales of French wine and spirits in the United States are expected to drop by at least 20 per cent.

Sophie Primas, the government spokeswoman, said Trump’s tariffs
would lead to “major economic disorder not only in Europe but also in the United States”.

Le Parisien newspaper said the imposition of tariffs did not mark Liberation Day, as Trump called it, but more The Day After, the disaster film about the destruction of the world in a US-Soviet nuclear war. “April 2, 2025, will go down as the day that a stroke of the hand by the most powerful man in the world swept away the world economic order as we have known it since the end of the Second World War.”

New Zealand ‘remains competitive in US market’

Todd McClay, New Zealand’s trade minister, has struck an optimistic note as he said the new 10 per cent tariff it was facing meant its exports remain competitive in the US market, compared with nations hit by higher tariffs.

McClay said it was important to note many countries were facing much higher tariff rates than New Zealand, which is a large exporter of lean beef used in US hamburgers.

“It’s very clear that the US, although they’re putting a tariff rate in place, has viewed New Zealand and our trading relationship as well balanced”, he said.

Tariffs are “not good for trade” and were likely to impact inflation, demand, and some currency rates, the minister added.

“We’ll be working very closely to our exporters during the course of today to get as much information as we can so that we can be well prepared in that market.”

How have markets reacted?

A currency trader reacts to tariffs in South Korea

A currency trader reacts to tariffs in South Korea

AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP

Stock markets and the dollar fell in overnight trading, with investors switching to safe havens. The pound rose against the dollar to $1.307 and Japan’s yen strengthened as foreign exchange traders looked for safety outside the dollar. Safe-haven buying pushed gold to a high above $3,160 an ounce at one stage before the price eased back to $3,132.35.

Japan’s Nikkei lost 3 per cent, with shippers, banks, insurers and exporters leading the sell-off. Shares fell in South Korea and Australia. The FTSE 100 is forecast to open 1.7 per cent lower and Germany’s Dax down 2 per cent.

Apple, which makes iPhones in China, had $240 billion wiped off its market value as its shares fell 7 per cent in after-hours trading. Nvidia, which manufactures chips in Taiwan, fell by 5.6 per cent, or $153 billion. Imports from China face tariffs of 34 per cent and 32 per cent from Taiwan.

Starmer: We will keep a cool head

There will be an economic impact from President Trump’s actions last night, the prime minister has said.

Sir Keir Starmer told business chiefs in Downing Street: “Last night the president of the United States acted for his country, and that is his mandate. Today, I will act in Britain’s interests with mine.”

“Clearly, there will be an economic impact from the decisions the US has taken, both here and globally,” he admitted.

“But I want to be crystal clear: we are prepared, indeed one of the great strengths of this nation is our ability to keep a cool head.”

Starmer promised that he would only strike a deal with the US “if it is in our national interest and if it is the right thing to do for the security of working people, protects the pound in their pocket that they have worked hard to earn”.

China vows countermeasures

China urged the United States to immediately cancel its latest tariffs and vowed countermeasures to safeguard its own interests, after the country appeared to be facing a cumulative 54 per cent surcharge on its exports into the US.

On Wednesday Trump announced China would be hit with a 34 per cent tariff, on top of the 20 per cent he imposed earlier this year, bringing the total close to the 60 per cent figure the US president had threatened while on the campaign trail.

The Chinese commerce ministry said in a statement that Trump’s move to impose sweeping tariffs disregards the balance of interests reached in multilateral trade negotiations and negated the benefits of international trade.

“China firmly opposes this and will take countermeasures to safeguard its own rights and interests,” the ministry said.

Economists have warned that a trade war between the two largest economies could seriously affect global supply chains.

Timeline for UK to seal a deal ‘in the gift of the US’

The business secretary said the UK has “modelled every scenario” for the impact of tariffs but it is “not just about the relationship between the UK and the US, but what is going on in the rest of the world”.

A timeline for the UK to seal an economic deal to mitigate tariffs is “largely in the gift of the US”, he said.

Reynolds said: “We have every scenario you could imagine planned for but we also have a plan in place to stay calm, to talk to the US, to continue our work, to make sure that we are getting the best for the UK and working with all friends and allies as a way through this, rather than let the rhetoric overcome us, let the siren calls to make this even worse be listened to.”

Business secretary: Tariffs on UK are disappointing

US tariffs on the UK are a “disappointment” and “a challenge”, the business secretary has said.

Jonathan Reynolds told Times Radio: “Any barrier to trade, particularly between the UK and our major trading partner, which the US is, is a disappointment to me. It’s a challenge.

“So, I recognise that the UK is in a better position than a lot of other countries from what was announced last night, but I was still disappointed.”

Volkswagen plans ‘import fee’ on cars

Volkswagen is planning to introduce an “import fee” on vehicles affected by the 25 per cent tariffs imposed by the US on cars made outside the US, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The German carmaker has temporarily halted rail shipments of vehicles from Mexico and will hold cars arriving by ship from Europe at ports, the report said, citing a memo to retailers.

Trump’s 25 per cent tariffs on the global automotive industry will cover more than $460 billion worth of imports of vehicles and auto parts imports annually, according to Reuters.

Volkswagen told its dealers that it would give more details by mid-April on pricing strategies for tariff-affected cars, and plans to begin allocating those vehicles to stores by the end of the month, the WSJ report said. “We want to be very transparent about navigating through this time of uncertainty,” Volkswagen told the Journal.

Giorgia Meloni: Tariffs of no benefit to either side

Meloni: “We will do all we can to reach a deal with the US”

Meloni: “We will do all we can to reach a deal with the US”

LAPRESSE/ALAMY

In Rome, Giorgia Meloni condemned Trump’s 20 per cent tariffs on European imports.

“The introduction by the US of tariffs against the EU is a measure I consider mistaken and of no benefit to either side,” the Italian prime minister posted on Facebook after Trump’s White House press conference.

“We will do all we can to reach a deal with the US with the aim of avoiding a commercial war that would inevitably weaken the West and favour other global actors,” she added.

The Spanish leader, Pedro Sánchez, said: “Spain will protect its companies and workers and will continue to be committed to an open world.”

Tariffs ‘may break World Trade Organisation rules’

Japan also described the tariffs as “extremely regrettable”, adding that they they may break World Trade Organisation rules and the bilateral trade agreement between the two countries.

“I have conveyed that the unilateral tariff measures taken by the United States are extremely regrettable, and I have again strongly urged [Washington] not to apply them to Japan,” Yoji Muto, the trade and industry minister, told reporters.

The list of tariffs announced by Trump

The list of tariffs announced by Trump

MARK SCHIEFELBEIN/AP

Muto said he had explained to the US commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, “how the US tariffs would adversely affect the US economy by undermining the capacity of Japanese companies to invest” before Trump’s announcement of a new 10 per cent baseline tariff and extra levies on selected countries, including Japan.

The government spokesman, Yoshimasa Hayashi, added: “We have serious concerns as to consistency with the WTO agreement and Japan-US trade agreement.”

South Korea calls for talks over ‘regrettable tariffs’

South Korea’s acting President, Han Duck-soo, called for talks with US officials to shield its export-reliant economy from the impact of US tariffs and ordered emergency support measures for businesses.

Trump said South Korean exports into the US would be subject to a 25 per cent tariff rate.

President Han asked the industry minister to analyse the content of the tariffs and actively negotiate with Washington to minimise the impact.

“As the global trade war has become a reality, the government must pour all its capabilities to overcome the trade crisis,” Han said at a meeting with the finance minister and other top officials.

Ahn Duk-geun, the industry minister, called the new tariffs “regrettable”.

Australia will not impose reciprocal tariffs

Anthony Albanese, Australia’s prime minister, said on Thursday the decision by Donald Trump to impose a 10 per cent tariff on its ally was “not the act of a friend”.

“It is the American people who will pay the biggest price for these unjustified tariffs,” he added. “This is why our government will not be seeking to impose reciprocal tariffs. We will not join a race to the bottom that leads to higher prices and slower growth.”

However he ruled out reciprocal tariffs against the United States.

In comments outside the White House, Trump singled out Australian beef, which recorded a surge in exports to the United States last year, reaching A$4 billion amid a slump in US beef production.

Albanese said Trump had not banned Australia beef, but had imposed a 10 per cent duty on all Australian goods entering the United States, despite US goods entering Australia tariff free.

“The [Trump] administration’s tariffs have no basis in logic and they go against the basis of our two nations’ partnership. This is not the act of a friend,” Albanese told reporters.

Von der Leyen ‘finalising countermeasures’

World leaders have mainly reacted with anger and warnings of countermeasures after Donald Trump’s announcement of global reciprocal tariffs.

Ursula von der Leyen, the European Commission president, described Trump‘s universal tariffs as a major blow to the world economy and said the European Union was preparing to respond.

“We are already finalising the first package of countermeasures in response to tariffs on steel,” she said in a statement read out in the Uzbek city of Samarkand on Thursday, before an EU-Central Asia partnership summit.

“And we’re now preparing for further countermeasures to protect our interests and our businesses if negotiations fail.”

Von der Leyen said she deeply regretted the US move and warned of “immense consequences” for the global economy.

The EU plans to impose tariffs on up to €26 billion euros ($28.4 billion) of US goods this month in response to US steel and aluminium tariffs that took effect on March 12.

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