World Briefing: April 3, 2025
U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday announced the most sweeping tariffs of his administration so far, including levies that exceed 30% on Asian economies such as China, Taiwan, Vietnam and Thailand. The tariffs will be two-tiered. First, there will be a 10% baseline tariff on all countries. A higher reciprocal tariff will be charged on roughly 60 countries -- those with which the U.S. has the largest trade deficits. For instance, China's total tariffs against the U.S. were calculated to be 67%, so the new tariffs would be half that at 34%. In a media event in the Rose Garden of the White House, Trump declared it to be "Liberation Day in America," and held up a chart with the reciprocal tariffs, including 32% on Taiwan, 24% on Japan and 25% on South Korea. Trump said Wednesday would be remembered as "the day American industry was reborn, the day America's destiny was reclaimed and the day we began to make America wealthy again." For decades, the U.S. has been plundered by friend and foe alike, he said. "Foreign leaders have stolen our jobs, foreign cheaters have ransacked our factories, and foreign scavengers have torn apart our once beautiful American dream," he said. The baseline tariffs go into effect at 12:01 a.m. EDT on Saturday, while the higher reciprocal tariffs go into effect at 12:01 a.m. on April 9. Many on the list were Asian economies, including Cambodia and Vietnam, which were slapped 49% and 46%, respectively - Nikkei Asia
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said the EU was 'prepared to respond' to the US president's new 20% levy on the bloc. She said the world will “massively suffer” from the tariffs, reported the FT. While the BBC reported that UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer tells business chiefs in Downing Street that "clearly there will be an economic impact" from Trump's tariffs - but the government will respond with "cool and calm heads".
The Trump administration notably did not include Russia on an expansive list of countries that will face major new tariffs, Reuters noted. Ukraine was slapped with a 10% levy, according to a fact sheet released by the White House. Trump has expressed frustration with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who he said was trying to renegotiate a minerals deal.
The sweeping tariffs extend to countries and territories across the world — including the uninhabited Heard and McDonald Islands in the sub-Antarctic Indian Ocean. The remote UNESCO World Heritage-listed Australian territory, which features a mostly barren landscape, was included in the list of baseline 10% taxes on U.S. imports, along with mainland Australia. The Heard and McDonald Islands were included because they are Australian territory, according to a White House official. This region that features the only volcanically active subantarctic islands is "teeming" with colonies of seals, penguins and other birds, per an Australian Antarctic Program post. Humans need a permit to visit the Heard and McDonald Islands, which are more than 2,000 miles southwest of Perth, Western Australia. It takes two weeks to sail from the Australian mainland. Another region with no permanent human population on Trump's list is the volcanic island of Jan Mayen in the Arctic Ocean. It's collectively designated with Svalbard, an archipelago with polar bears and a small human population some 580 miles north of north of Tromsø, Norway.
In Asia, major stock indexes have fallen in morning trading as concerns grow over the threat of a global trade war. Stock markets in mainland China have just opened with the Shanghai Composite index trading broadly flat, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng is down by 1.2%. The Nikkei 225 in Tokyo is down by 2.9%, the Kospi in South Korea is down by 1.7%, and Australia's ASX 200 is around 1.2% lower. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average were down by around 800 points, or 1.8%, while S&P futures fell 2.7%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 futures were 3.3% lower - BBC
Initial reactions from the U.S. business sector were mixed. Gary Shapiro, CEO and vice chair of the Consumer Technology Association, said he was concerned the sweeping tariffs will result in "massive tax hikes on Americans that will drive inflation, kill jobs on Main Street, and may cause a recession for the U.S. economy." He pointed out that "this will not be a golden age -- but a return to the global economic catastrophe of the Smoot-Hawley tariffs of the 1930s that will disproportionately hurt low-income and hardworking Americans." David French, executive vice president of government relations for National Retail Federation, echoed those concerns. "More tariffs equal more anxiety and uncertainty for American businesses and consumers. While leaders in Washington may not care about higher prices, hardworking American families do," he said. "Even more so, the immediate implementation of these tariffs is a massive undertaking and requires both advance notice and substantial preparation by the millions of U.S. businesses that will be directly impacted," French added - Nikkei Asia
Russia was absent on the Trump list of countries that will face major new tariffs. But Ukraine was slapped with a 10% levy, according to White House fact sheet. Trump has expressed frustration with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for allegedly slowing the rare earth minerals deal - Reuters
Moldova, a neighbour and ally of Ukraine wasn’t spared either. According to The Moldova Matters newsletter, the US claimed that Moldova levies 61% tariffs on US goods and therefore the US will now levy 31% on Moldova. “For a country already in a recession and struggling to get the economy moving under the shadow of the War in Ukraine, the timing is not great,” the newsletter said.
Democratic senators sent a letter to the Trump administration on Wednesday criticizing what they called the paltry U.S. aid response to the earthquake in Myanmar, where China and Russia have sent rescue and relief teams. The six senators said in the letter that the United States appeared to be failing the first test of its ability to respond to a humanitarian crisis in the wake of the Trump administration’s drastic cuts to foreign aid and dismantling of the United States Agency for International Development, the main aid agency. “We are deeply concerned that the administration’s response is failing to meet both our moral and strategic objectives — sending a signal to countries around the world that our adversaries are more reliable and trustworthy than the United States,” the senators wrote. The United States did not send any specialist aid teams to Myanmar after the earthquake hit on Friday. More than 2,700 people have died as buildings there and in neighboring Thailand collapsed, according to the ruling authoritarian military leaders of Myanmar. The junta asked other nations for help. China, Russia and India sent teams and supplies, as did Thailand, Malaysia and Vietnam. As of this past weekend, the United States had not even managed to get a three-person assessment team into the country, The New York Times reported on Sunday - NYT
Russian President Vladimir Putin's investment envoy Kirill Dmitriev met with U.S. officials in Washington on Wednesday as the Trump administration continues to press Russia and Ukraine to agree to a ceasefire, two U.S. officials familiar with the matter said. Dmitriev, a Stanford-educated former Goldman Sachs investment banker, is one of the most U.S.-savvy members of Russia's elite, with close relations to some key members of the Trump team. He is the highest-ranking Russian official to travel to the U.S. on state business since Russia's 2022 expanded invasion of Ukraine. Dmitriev may be key in repairing relations that were, until Trump's January inauguration, the worst between Moscow and Washington since the most dangerous junctures of the Cold War - Reuters
The Trump administration’s de-funding of Voice of America, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and other US taxpayer-funded overseas broadcast networks will, if successful, only benefit the autocrats and serve as a huge blow to freedom of expression worldwide - experts said at panel last night at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand here in Bangkok. Moreover, dozens of journalists currently employed by these services risk having their visas cancelled and being forced to return to their home countries where some are on wanted lists. There was also support voiced for resources for the growing number of exiled journalists who’ve been left out of the media ecosystem. People in Myanmar will suffer from the cancellation of Burmese-language services of VOA, RFE.