Summary

Media caption,

'No justification' - World leaders react to Trump's global tariffs

  1. BBC Verify

    How did the US work out the tariff numbers?published at 10:15 British Summer Time 4 April

    Donald Trump holding a chart during his tariff announcementImage source, Reuters

    If you scan across Donald Trump’s tariff chart, you'll see that the value in the second column equals roughly half of the number in the first column for most countries. There's a reason for that.

    The two columns represent:

    1. Tariffs that countries supposedly charge the US
    2. Tariffs the US will impose on other countries

    Initially, it was assumed that the figures were based on existing tariffs plus other trade barriers (like regulations and licensing rules) which make trade harder.

    But, the White House has now published its official methodology, and it turns out there is a simple equation behind it.

    The calculations are based on a country’s goods trade deficit with the US. In other words, how much more the US imports than it exports. This number is then divided by the total value of imports from that country.

    Let's use China as an example: The US buys more goods from China than it sells to them - there is a goods deficit of $295bn and the total amount of goods it buys from China is $440bn.

    Then, we find the percentage difference between those two numbers, which = 67% - that's the number which appears in the first column of Trump’s chart.

    And to work out column two - the tariff the US wishes to impose - you simply divide that number by two.

    So in China’s case, the result is 34, and there you have the tariff.

  2. Island of penguins also on Trump's tariff listpublished at 10:07 British Summer Time 4 April

    Ottie Mitchell and Tiffanie Turnbull
    BBC News, Sydney

    Group of penguins on an icy beach in Antarctica at duskImage source, PA Media

    Two tiny, remote Antarctic outposts home to penguins and seals have also ended up on the list for Trump’s new tariffs.

    Heard and McDonald Islands – a territory about 4,000km (2,485 miles) south-west of Australia – can only be reached by a week-long boat trip from Perth, and haven’t seen human visitors in almost a decade.

    “It just shows and exemplifies the fact that nowhere on Earth is safe from this,” Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Thursday.

    Read more about how an island of penguins found itself on Trump’s tariff list.

    A mountain next to the ocean, which has medium sized waves. The bow of a boat is visible, with a piece of equipment with the word "dreggen" written on it.Image source, Annelise Rees
  3. Residents on remote Australian Island 'laughing' about 29% tariffpublished at 09:58 British Summer Time 4 April

    Aerial shot of Norfolk IslandImage source, Getty Images

    Some Canadians may be angry about Trump's policy, but others are finding it amusing.

    One of the targets of Trump’s tariffs is Norfolk Island – a tiny Australian territory with about 2,200 residents.

    The island’s been hit with a 29% tariff.

    Locals say the economy relies on tourism and they don’t export anything to the US – so the tariff has become something of a running joke.

    “Everyone's laughing about it,” Gye Duncan, a former resident, tells Reuters news agency. “They're either laughing about it or confused why because there's no real reason, or no logical reason why he (Trump) would do that.”

    People on the island are hoping the sudden international attention will give them a much-needed publicity boost and attract more visitors to the rugged volcanic island in the southern Pacific.

  4. Canadians continue to boycott US productspublished at 09:51 British Summer Time 4 April

    Robin Levinson King
    Reporting from Toronto, Ontario

    At her local grocery store, Benedykta Mazur has taken on the role of a bit of a sleuth.

    Since Donald Trump launched a trade war with Canada, she's been doing her best to buy Canadian wherever she can.

    She refuses to buy anything grown or made in the US.

    "It's a no, an absolute no," she tells me. "This is something that is not going to be just kind of wishy washy."

    Mazur says that while Canadians are known for being "really nice", it's time to focus that friendliness elsewhere and build ties with countries that "share commonalities in regards to how you treat another person, because countries are made of people".

  5. US-Canada relationship will never be the same again - Canada's foreign ministerpublished at 09:41 British Summer Time 4 April

    Canada's foreign minister Mélanie Joly speaking to press at a Nato event in BrusselsImage source, Reuters

    Nato foreign ministers are meeting in Brussels today to talk about Russia’s war in Ukraine – but some are also reacting to Trump’s sweeping tariffs.

    UK Foreign Minister David Lammy says he regrets the "return to protectionism in the US", while Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly says Canada’s relationship with the US will never be the same again.

    Joly also says Canada is putting maximum pressure on the Trump administration.

    We’re expecting to hear from US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who’s also in Brussels, a bit later today.

    Just a reminder – Canada wasn’t on the list of new tariffs announced this week, but Trump had already imposed a 25% tariff on goods coming into the US from Canada. He’s also previously called for Canada to become the US’s 51st state.

  6. Car plant shutdown in Canada 'very scary' for workerspublished at 09:31 British Summer Time 4 April

    Ali Abbas Ahmadi
    Reporting from Windsor, Ontario

    Derek Gungle

    Carmaker Stellantis says it will temporarily shut down its assembly plant in Windsor, a Canadian city on the US border, next week because of car tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump.

    Derek Gungle, who works on the assembly line at the plant, says the news was “kind of expected” after the tariffs were announced – but still “scary, very scary”.

    Speaking quietly after giving several interviews, Gungle says Windsor depends heavily on cross-border trade, and any threat to that could have devastating consequences.

    If the shutdown becomes permanent or he loses his job, Gungle says he has “no idea” what he’ll do.

  7. UK construction giant doubles its investment in Texas – but says local jobs won't be hitpublished at 09:23 British Summer Time 4 April

    Two builders stand beside a JCB diggerImage source, Getty Images

    The boss of construction giant JCB has urged the UK government not to hit back at Donald Trump’s tariffs, warning it could lead to “a trade war we can only lose”.

    It comes after the UK published a 417-page list of US goods that could face tariffs in response.

    JCB has announced it will double its investment in a new factory in Texas, but chief executive Graeme McDonald says this won’t affect jobs in the UK.

    “We can’t ignore the biggest market in the world,” he tells BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, adding the best way to deal with the tariffs is to “make in America”.

    Trump has said companies producing in the US won’t face tariffs, but McDonald says it’s still unclear what “make in America” actually means, given global supply chains.

    His message to the UK government: “do not retaliate, negotiate” – as there’s “a deal to be done” with the US.

  8. Big economies could stop their 'addiction' to US consumers – economistpublished at 09:14 British Summer Time 4 April

    Jim O’Neill, former chief economist at Goldman Sachs and treasury minister, says the UK should think about what it can gain from and offer to the rest of the world in response to US tariffs.

    Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, O’Neill suggests the UK should talk to other G7 countries about lowering trade barriers, especially for cross-border services, “which is what the UK has a marginal advantage in”.

    “The most important thing is to try to more seriously pursue the obvious things elsewhere in the world that would be to our benefit – I’d include China and India in that too,” he says.

    O’Neill also says that if the US wants to impose tariffs, it’s “in the bounds of feasibility” for other big economies to restructure and stop their “addiction to the US consumer”.

  9. UK working at pace on trade deal, says treasury ministerpublished at 09:03 British Summer Time 4 April

    The UK government is "working at pace" to secure a trade deal with the US, a treasury minister tells the BBC.

    Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, James Murray says the government is "disappointed" global tariffs have been introduced, but it will keep a "cool head" and take a "pragmatic approach".

    The focus is on getting a trade deal, says Murray, but the government is keeping "everything on the table" when it comes to its response.

  10. Analysis

    Tariffs are yet another example of colossal, upending changepublished at 08:50 British Summer Time 4 April

    Chris Mason
    Political editor

    President Trump's lament about the consequences of deindustrialisation in America and his reaction to that is prompting the UK and others to have to think nimbly and devote considerable bandwidth to preparing contingencies for what might happen next.

    How should we understand and grapple with the magnitude of what we are witnessing?

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer is not a man known for flights of rhetorical fancy.

    So it is instructive to see how he is articulating this moment.

    He claimed it was "the beginning of a new era for trade and the economy" and not just this, but was the second such paradigm shift we have witnessed just in the last few months.

    There was already the beginnings of a new era for defence and security, he suggested, with the UK, Germany and others committed to ramping up spending on the military.

  11. What are Trump's tariffs all about – and who's feeling them the most?published at 08:37 British Summer Time 4 April

    Jamie Whitehead
    Live reporter

    Two boards showing the reciprical tariffs imposed by the United States this week.Image source, Getty Images

    President Trump's baseline tariff – a 10% tax on all imports to the US – comes into effect tomorrow, 5 April.

    But it’s not a one-size-fits-all charge.

    Countries Trump sees as “the worst offenders” on trade will have higher rates imposed. These take effect on 9 April. The European Union will face a 20% rate, Japan 24%, and China 34%.

    China’s rate is on top of earlier duties, meaning its total tariff on exports to the US will be 54%.

    The UK will only be subject to the 10% baseline tariff.

    BBC Verify has looked into how these tariffs were worked out.

    The rear of a black Range Rover being built in a factory. It has no wheels and has been lifted off the ground by blue machinery on either side of it.
    Image caption,

    More than 25,000 jobs in the UK car industry could be at risk as a result of new US tariffs

    The global car industry has taken a big hit, with a 25% tariff on all foreign-made cars coming into effect shortly after the announcement earlier this week.

    But hundreds of products are exempt. These include energy products, some minerals and chemicals used in energy and manufacturing.

    Not all countries are affected by the new tariffs either. Canada and Mexico weren’t mentioned this week, but they could still face 25% tariffs on most of their imports.

    Russia isn’t on the list either. The White House reportedly said that’s because existing sanctions on Russia already "preclude any meaningful trade".

    We’ve got more on who’s being charged in our at-a-glance guide.

  12. European markets also dip in the wake of Trump's tariffspublished at 08:25 British Summer Time 4 April

    Tom Espiner
    Business reporter

    Market jitters are still being felt across Europe as traders factor in uncertainty over the possible economic impact of Trump's tariffs.

    The fallout from his blanket tariff announcement on Wednesday continues, with the FTSE 100 in London down nearly 0.9%, the Cac 40 in Paris falling 0.92%, and Frankfurt's Dax slipping 0.74% in early trading.

    Heading to a golf tournament in Florida on Thursday, Trump told reporters he thought things were going "very well", adding: "The markets are going to boom."

  13. London stock market slides at the openpublished at 08:03 British Summer Time 4 April
    Breaking

    The FTSE 100 opened more than 0.3% lower and has continued to fall. It quickly dropped to 0.56%, then slid further to 0.68%.

    Traders are concerned about the global economic impact of US trade policy.

    We'll bring you more updates on this.

  14. London stock market opens soon – here's a quick look at markets around the worldpublished at 07:54 British Summer Time 4 April

    Tom Espiner
    Business reporter

    Before trading gets under way on the London stock market at 08:00 BST, here's a quick look at what's been happening around the world.

    Markets have been on edge over the possible impact of Trump’s tariffs, with traders worried about a US or even global recession.

    US markets all closed lower on Thursday – the Dow Jones fell nearly 4%, the S&P 500 dropped close to 5%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq slid nearly 6%. Those are big moves.

    Asian markets also took a hit – Japan’s Nikkei was down more than 2.6%, and Australian shares dropped to their lowest level in eight months, with the S&P/ASX 200 index down more than 2.4%.

    As a general rule, if stock market indexes move more than 2% in a day, up or down, it usually signals something significant.

    Pedestrians stand in front of an electronic board showing the numbers of the Nikkei Stock Average on the Tokyo Stock Exchange along a street in TokyoImage source, Getty Images
  15. Trump says UK 'very happy' about tariff treatmentpublished at 07:43 British Summer Time 4 April

    Starmer and Trump sitting next to each otherImage source, Reuters

    US President Donald Trump told reporters last night that UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer was "very happy" about how Britain has been treated on tariffs.

    "We have a very good dialogue and I think he was very happy about how we treated them with tariffs," he said on board Air Force One, referring to the 10% import tax he imposed on the UK, which is among the lowest globally.

    Yesterday, Starmer said his government was "taking a calm approach, acting in the national interest".

    But the government has also published a list of US products it could target with retaliatory tariffs – seen as a sign it's taking a tougher line.

  16. European foreign ministers raise issue of tariffs with Rubiopublished at 07:35 British Summer Time 4 April

    Tom Bateman
    US State Department correspondent, travelling with Marco Rubio

    European anger over the 20% import tax on EU goods to the United States was clear from foreign ministers at a Nato meeting in Brussels yesterday.

    The French delegation said transatlantic solidarity was "being tested” by President Trump’s tariffs, while Germany’s foreign minister suggested the move damaged Nato’s economic security.

    Concerns were such that they were put directly to the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, despite the meeting being about defence.

    A senior State Department official confirmed the issue of tariffs was raised in the meeting of 32 foreign ministers, but denied the tone was accusatory, describing it instead as collegial.

    It comes amid the biggest strain in US-Europe relations in years, with the Trump administration unleashing a series of demands as well as insults to their European allies over what they have described as countries freeloading on American security guarantees.

  17. Remind me, what are tariffs and how do they work?published at 07:26 British Summer Time 4 April

    Tariffs are taxes charged on goods imported from other countries.

    The companies that bring the foreign goods into the country pay the tax to the government.

    Typically, tariffs are a percentage of a product's value. A 20% tariff on Chinese goods means a product worth $10 (£7.76) has an additional $2 charge.

    Firms may choose to pass on some or all of the cost of tariffs to customers.

    The US has typically charged lower tariffs on goods than other countries.

    Trump's new tariffs could lead to a sharp increase in the prices people pay for goods in the US and around the globe.

  18. 'So crazy' or a 'necessary evil'? Here's what Americans thinkpublished at 07:15 British Summer Time 4 April

    Media caption,

    'He's flipped the system': Americans react to Trump's tariffs

    We've been reporting that the Trump administration still feels confident about the tariff measures, despite the drop in the stock market. But some Republicans are starting to feel uneasy.

    What about the American people?

    "I know we're all going to get pinched in the pocket for a while. I think in the long run, it's going to get us out of the massive deficit that we're in," 71-year-old Mary Anne Dagata from Michigan tells the BBC.

    But Catherine Foster, 58, from Florida, is worried about her retirement.

    "Trump is not a king and I feel like our Congress and Senate is letting us down, both parties, by not pushing back [on tariffs]," she says.

    We've got more reaction from the US on the tariffs here.

  19. Analysis

    Trump's tariff blitz is starting to make some Republicans uneasypublished at 07:05 British Summer Time 4 April

    Anthony Zurcher
    North America correspondent

    There is some anxiety, which you are starting to see signs of in the behaviour of the Republicans in Congress.

    On Thursday, we saw several Republicans break with their party in the Senate.

    You saw Chuck Grassley, a senior member of the Republican leadership and a senator from Iowa, co-sponsor a bill that would limit Donald Trump's ability to propose new tariffs and give Congress a say in extending those beyond a fixed deadline.

    I think you will see more of that in the midterm elections, if it looks like the stock market pain is going to continue, and you'll start hearing from consumers more about rising prices.

    This all mixes into a certain sense of unease and this will only grow if this is not temporary - as Donald Trump and his administration promise.

  20. Stock market drop was just 'one bad day' - Vancepublished at 06:59 British Summer Time 4 April

    JD Vance walking out of the White House. A row of flags are behind him.Image source, Reuters

    US Vice-President JD Vance has told Newsmax that yesterday’s stock market drop – the sharpest since 2020 – was just “one bad day”.

    “But we’re going to have a booming stock market for a long time, because we are reinvesting in the United States of America,” he says.

    The vice-president says the government wants Wall Street to do well, “but we care the most about are American workers and about American small businesses. And they’re the ones who are really going to benefit from these policies.”

    Vance also says the tariffs imposed “could have gone a lot higher”, but Trump is trying to “send a message that we’re going to be a little kind”.