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Trump’s tariffs have launched global trade wars. Here’s a timeline of how we got here

U.S. President Donald Trump holds a chart next to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick as Trump delivers remarks on tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025. (REUTERS)
U.S. President Donald Trump holds a chart next to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick as Trump delivers remarks on tariffs in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 16 April 2025

Trump’s tariffs have launched global trade wars. Here’s a timeline of how we got here

Trump’s tariffs have launched global trade wars. Here’s a timeline of how we got here
  • Beijing responded with its own retaliatory tariffs on a range of US products

NEW YORK: Long-threatened tariffs from US President Donald Trump have plunged the country into trade wars abroad — all while on-again, off-again new levies continue to escalate uncertainty.
Trump is no stranger to tariffs. He launched a trade war during his first term, taking particular aim at China by putting taxes on most of its goods. Beijing responded with its own retaliatory tariffs on a range of US products. Meanwhile, Trump also used the threat of more tariffs to force Canada and Mexico to renegotiate a North American trade pact, called the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, in 2020.
When President Joe Biden took office, he preserved most of the tariffs Trump previously enacted against China, in addition to imposing some new restrictions — but his administration claimed to take a more targeted approach.
Fast-forward to today, and economists stress there could be greater consequences on businesses and economies worldwide under Trump’s more sweeping tariffs this time around — and that higher prices will likely leave consumers footing the bill. There’s also been a sense of whiplash from Trump’s back-and-forth tariff threats and responding retaliation seen over the last few months.
Here’s a timeline of how we got here:
January 20
Trump is sworn into office. In his inaugural address, he again promises to “tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our citizens.” And he reiterates plans to create an agency called the External Revenue Service, which has yet to be established.
On his first day in office, Trump also says he expects to put 25 percent tariffs on Canada and Mexico starting on Feb. 1, while declining to immediately flesh out plans for taxing Chinese imports.
January 26
Trump threatens 25 percent tariffs on all Colombia imports and other retaliatory measures after President Gustavo Petro’s rejects two US military aircraft carrying migrants to the country, accusing Trump of not treating immigrants with dignity during deportation.
In response, Petro also announces a retaliatory 25 percent increase in Colombian tariffs on US goods. But Colombia later reversed its decision and accepted the flights carrying migrants. The two countries soon signaled a halt in the trade dispute.
February 1
Trump signs an executive order to impose tariffs on imports from Mexico, Canada and China — 10 percent on all imports from China and 25 percent on imports from Mexico and Canada starting Feb. 4. Trump invoked this power by declaring a national emergency — ostensibly over undocumented immigration and drug trafficking.
The action prompts swift outrage from all three countries, with promises of retaliatory measures.
February 3
Trump agrees to a 30-day pause on his tariff threats against Mexico and Canada, as both trading partners take steps to appease Trump’s concerns about border security and drug trafficking.
February 4
Trump’s new 10 percent tariffs on all Chinese imports to the US still go into effect. China retaliates the same day by announcing a flurry of countermeasures, including sweeping new duties on a variety of American goods and an anti-monopoly investigation into Google.
China’s 15 percent tariffs on coal and liquefied natural gas products, and a 10 percent levy on crude oil, agricultural machinery and large-engine cars imported from the US, take effect Feb. 10.
February 10
Trump announces plans to hike steel and aluminum tariffs starting March 12. He removes the exemptions from his 2018 tariffs on steel, meaning that all steel imports will be taxed at a minimum of 25 percent, and also raises his 2018 aluminum tariffs from 10 percent to 25 percent.
February 13
Trump announces a plan for “reciprocal” tariffs — promising to increase US tariffs to match the tax rates that countries worldwide charge on imports “for purposes of fairness.” Economists warn that the reciprocal tariffs, set to overturn decades of trade policy, could create chaos for global businesses.
February 25
Trump signs an executive order instructing the Commerce Department to consider whether a tariff on imported copper is needed to protect national security. He cites the material’s use in US defense, infrastructure and emerging technologies.
March 1
Trump signs an additional executive order instructing the Commerce Department to consider whether tariffs on lumber and timber are also needed to protect national security, arguing that the construction industry and military depend on a strong supply of wooden products in the US
March 4
Trump’s 25 percent tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico go into effect, though he limits the levy to 10 percent on Canadian energy. He also doubles the tariff on all Chinese imports to 20 percent.
All three countries promise retaliatory measures. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces tariffs on more than $100 billion of American goods over the course of 21 days. And Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum says her country would respond with its own retaliatory tariffs on US goods without specifying the targeted products immediately, signaling hopes to de-escalate.
China, meanwhile, imposes tariffs of up to 15 percent on a wide array of key US farm exports, set to take effect March 10. It also expands the number of US companies subject to export controls and other restrictions by about two dozen.
March 5
Trump grants a one-month exemption on his new tariffs impacting goods from Mexico and Canada for US automakers. The pause arrives after the president spoke with leaders of the “Big 3” automakers — Ford, General Motors and Stellantis.
March 6
In a wider extension, Trump postpones 25 percent tariffs on many imports from Mexico and some imports from Canada for a month.
Trump credited Sheinbaum with making progress on border security and drug smuggling as a reason for again pausing tariffs. His actions also thaw relations with Canada somewhat, although outrage and uncertainty remains. Still, after its initial retaliatory tariffs of $30 billion Canadian ($21 billion) on US goods, the government says it’s suspended a second wave of retaliatory tariffs worth $125 billion Canadian ($87 billion).
March 10
China’s retaliatory 15 percent tariffs on key American farm products — including chicken, pork, soybeans and beef — take effect. Goods already in transit are set to be exempt through April 12, per China’s Commerce Ministry previous announcement.
March 12

Trump’s new tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports go into effect. Both metals are now taxed at 25 percent across the board — with Trump’s order to remove steel exemptions and raise aluminum’s levy from his previously-imposed 2018 import taxes.
The European Union takes retaliatory trade action promising new duties on US industrial and farm products. The measures will cover goods from the United States worth some 26 billion euros ($28 billion), and not just steel and aluminum products, but also textiles, home appliances and agricultural goods. Motorcycles, bourbon, peanut butter and jeans will be hit, as they were during Trump’s first term. The 27-member bloc later says it will delay this retaliatory action until mid-April.
Canada, meanwhile, announces plans to impose more retaliatory tariffs worth Canadian $29.8 billion ($20.7 billion) on US imports, set to go into effect March 13.
March 13
Trump threatens a 200 percent tariff on European wine, Champagne and spirits if the European Union goes forward with its previously-announced plans for a 50 percent tariff on American whiskey.
March 24
Trump says he will place a 25 percent tariff on all imports from any country that buys oil or gas from Venezuela, in addition to imposing new tariffs on the South American country itself, starting April 2.
The tariffs would most likely add to the taxes facing China, which in 2023 bought 68 percent of the oil exported by Venezuela, per the US Energy Information Administration. But a number of countries also receive oil from Venezuela — including the United States itself.
March 26
Trump says he is placing 25 percent tariffs on auto imports. These auto imports will start being collected April 3 — beginning with taxes on fully-imported cars. The tariffs are set to then expand to applicable auto parts in the following weeks, through May 3.
April 2
Trump announces his long-promised “reciprocal” tariffs — declaring a 10 percent baseline tax on imports across the board starting April 5, as well as higher rates for dozens of nations that run trade surpluses with the US to take effect April 9.
Among those steeper levies, Trump says the US will now charge a 34 percent tax on imports from China, a 20 percent tax on imports from the European Union, 25 percent on South Korea, 24 percent on Japan and 32 percent on Taiwan. The new tariffs come on top of previously-imposed levies, including the 20 percent tax Trump announced on all Chinese imports earlier this year.
Meanwhile, for Canada and Mexico, the White House says USMCA-compliant imports can continue to enter the US duty-free. Once the two countries have satisfied Trump’s demands on immigration and drug trafficking, the White House adds, the tariff on the rest of their imports may drop from 25 percent to 12 percent.
April 3
Trump’s previously-announced auto tariffs begin. Prime Minister Mark Carney says that Canada will match the 25 percent levies with a tariff on vehicles imported from the US
April 4
China announces plans to impose a 34 percent tariff on imports of all US products beginning April 10, matching Trump’s new “reciprocal” tariff on Chinese goods, as part of a flurry of retaliatory measures.
The Commerce Ministry in Beijing says it will also impose more export controls on rare earths, which are materials used in high-tech products like computer chips and electric vehicle batteries. And the government adds 27 firms to lists of companies subject to trade sanctions or export controls.
April 5
Trump’s 10 percent minimum tariff on nearly all countries and territories takes effect.
April 9
Trump’s higher “reciprocal” rates go into effect, hiking taxes on imports from dozens of countries just after midnight. But hours later, his administration says it will suspend most of these higher rates for 90 days, while maintaining the recently-imposed 10 percent levy on nearly all global imports.
China is the exception. After following through on a threat to raise levies against China to a total of 104 percent, Trump says he will now raise those import taxes to 125 percent “effective immediately” — escalating tit-for-tat duties that have piled up between the two countries. The White House later clarifies that total tariffs against China are actually now 145 percent, once his previous 20 percent fentanyl tariffs are accounted for.
China upped its retaliation prior to this announcement — vowing to tax American goods at 84 percent starting April 10. Also earlier, EU member states vote to approve their own retaliatory levies on 20.9 billion euros ($23 billion) of US goods in response to Trump’s previously-imposed steel and aluminum tariffs. The EU’s executive commission doesn’t immediately specify which imports it will tax, but notes its counter tariffs will come in stages — with some set to arrive on April 15, and others May 15 and Dec. 1.
Separately, Canada’s counter tariffs on auto imports take effect. The country implements a 25 percent levy on auto imports from the US that do not comply with the 2020 USMCA pact.
April 10
The EU puts its steel and aluminum tariff retaliation on hold for 90 days, to match Trump’s pause on steeper “reciprocal” levies. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen says the commission wants to give negotiations with the US a chance — but warns countermeasures will kick in if talks “are not satisfactory.”
April 11
China says it will raise tariffs on US goods from 84 percent to 125 percent, in response to Trump’s heightened levies. The new rate is set to begin April 12.
Later, the Trump administration unveils that electronics, including smartphones and laptops, will be exempt from so-called “reciprocal” tariffs. But in the days following, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick signals that this is only a temporary reprieve, saying that sector-specific levies on semiconductors will arrive in “probably a month or two.” And other, non-“reciprocal” tariffs that tax some electronics, notably from China, remain.
April 14
Trump says he might temporarily exempt the auto industry from tariffs he previously imposed on the sector, to give carmakers time to adjust their supply chains.
The Trump administration also launches investigations into imports of computer chips, chipmaking equipment and pharmaceuticals — signaling next steps toward imposing tariffs on these sectors. The US Commerce Department posts notices about these probes, seeking public comment within the next three weeks.
Separately, the Commerce Department says it’s withdrawing from a 2019 agreement that had suspended an antidumping investigation into fresh tomato imports from Mexico. That termination, set to take effect July 14, means most tomatoes from Mexico will be subject to a 20.91 percent tariff.


EU preliminarily finds Meta, TikTok in breach of transparency obligations

Updated 4 sec ago

EU preliminarily finds Meta, TikTok in breach of transparency obligations

EU preliminarily finds Meta, TikTok in breach of transparency obligations
BRUSSELS: The European Commission said on Friday that US Big Tech giant Meta and Chinese-owned social media app TikTok breach their obligation to grant researchers adequate access to public data under the Digital Services Act (DSA) according to its preliminary findings.
In a statement, the Commission also said that Meta’s Facebook and Instagram do not appear to provide a user-friendly and easily accessible mechanism for users to flag illegal content, such as child sexual abuse material and terrorist content.
The EU has cracked down on Big Tech companies with the Digital Services Act, which requires large platforms such as social media sites and search engines to have robust measures to mitigate the spread of illegal and harmful content.
“The Commission’s preliminary findings show that Facebook, Instagram and TikTok may have put in place burdensome procedures and tools for researchers to request access to public data,” the EU executive said about the transparency issue.
“Allowing researchers access to platforms’ data is an essential transparency obligation under the DSA, as it provides public scrutiny into the potential impact of platforms on our physical and mental health.”
On Meta hindering the reporting of illegal content, the Commission said the company currently has mechanisms that impose several unnecessary steps and additional demands on users and use “deceptive interface designs.”
“Such practices can be confusing and dissuading. Meta’s mechanisms to flag and remove illegal content may therefore be ineffective. Under the DSA, ‘Notice and Action’ mechanisms are key to allowing EU users ... to inform online platforms that certain content does not comply with EU or national laws,” it said.
The Commission added the companies now have the possibility to examine its findings and take measures to remedy the breaches, adding that the preliminary findings do not prejudge the outcome of the investigation.
But if the findings of the Commission are confirmed by relevant consultations, it may impose a fine on the companies of as much as 6 percent of their annual global sales.

Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis

Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis
Updated 6 min 37 sec ago

Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis

Rapid early spread of bird flu in Europe raises fears of fresh crisis
  • The spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, is a concern for governments and the poultry industry due to the devastation it can cause to flocks, the possibility of trade restrictions and a risk of a new pandemic
  • This is the first time it has spread to 10 countries this early in the season for at least a decade, although the total number of outbreaks remains lower than in 2022 when the bloc recorded its worst ever bird flu crisis

PARIS: Bird flu is spreading rapidly in Europe, with the highest number of countries in at least a decade reporting early outbreaks, raising concerns about a repeat of past crises that led to the culling of tens of million birds and higher food prices.
The spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, is a concern for governments and the poultry industry due to the devastation it can cause to flocks, the possibility of trade restrictions and a risk of a new pandemic.
The disease, mainly spread by migrating wild birds, caused 56 outbreaks in 10 EU countries and Britain from August to mid-October, mostly in Poland — the top EU poultry producer — Spain and Germany, France’s animal health surveillance body ESA said.
This is the first time it has spread to 10 countries this early in the season for at least a decade, although the total number of outbreaks remains lower than in 2022 when the bloc recorded its worst ever bird flu crisis.
Last year there were 31 outbreaks in nine countries during the same period.
“All these cases in Europe show that the virus is far from gone,” said Yann Nedelec, director of French poultry industry group Anvol.

POULTRY ORDERED INDOOR AS VIRUS SPREADS
Since ESA’s latest report, Belgium and Slovakia this week reported their first bird flu cases of the season, the World Organization for Animal Health said on Wednesday, which prompted Belgium to order that all poultry be kept indoors.
Two other outbreaks also emerged in France, another major poultry producer, the farm ministry said on Tuesday as it ordered that birds be confined, citing rising outbreaks in Spain and Germany. Last year the order came in November and in December the year before.
The risk of bird flu for humans remains low, with most people infected having been in close contact with infected animals, but the virus needs to be monitored as it increasingly spreads to mammals, the World Health Organization said.
France has begun its third annual bird flu vaccination campaign for farm ducks, making it the first major poultry exporter to do so nationwide. It has credited the policy with curbing the disease.
Bird flu has also hit the US and Asia. Over 180 million birds were culled in the US, affecting egg prices and infecting dairy cows and people.
Brazil, the world’s largest poutry exporter, faced an outbreak but is now free of bird flu. Japan reported its first case of the season this week.


Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections

Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections
Updated 15 min 31 sec ago

Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections

Milei promises ‘Argentina will change’ after elections
  • Argentina is in the throes of an economic meltdown, and earlier this week the Trump administration signed off on a $20 billion lifeline in support of ally Milei
  • Milei’s party is targeting the Rosario area in a bid to secure votes to offset an almost certain defeat in other major provinces like Buenos Aires

ROSARIO: Argentina’s President Javier Milei concluded his mid-term election campaign on Thursday with a promise for change as a persistent financial crisis weighs on the country.
“We are on the right path, which is why I ask you to continue supporting us this Sunday,” Milei told a rally in Rosario, in the country’s north, promising that “Argentina will change.”
The legislative elections will determine whether the budget-slashing incumbent, whose party is in the minority, will wield more power in parliament in the second half of his term.
“Let’s not stop halfway... this election is so important,” he said.
Thousands cheered Milei, who performed a capella for the crowd as they waved Argentine and violet flags of his La Libertad Avanza party.
Alejandra Paso, a Milei fan was dressed head-to-toe in violet and enthusiastically applauded and chanted her support.
“If he hasn’t done more, it’s because he doesn’t have the money,” the 67-year-old retiree told AFP.
Her demographic was hardest hit by Milei’s austerity policy and budget cuts, but she has faith “in this man who speaks the language of the streets and can make the changes that no one ever dared to make before.”
The rally took place in Rosario, the country’s third most populous city on the banks of the Parana River and the main grain exporting port of Argentina — one of the world’s biggest food producers.
Like many of Milei’s rallies, the thunderous rock and roll music and stage setup felt more like a concert than a traditional political event.

- Protest march -

Argentina is in the throes of an economic meltdown, and earlier this week the Trump administration signed off on a $20 billion lifeline in support of ally Milei.
Milei’s party is targeting the Rosario area in a bid to secure votes to offset an almost certain defeat in other major provinces like Buenos Aires.
Merchant Mariano Reyes, 48, said he struggles to believe Milei’s party can repeat its 2023 victory in Rosario.
“But it’s not a presidential election,” he told AFP, expressing hope for a “celebration so he can govern without obstacles in Congress.”
Before arriving in Rosario, Milei was forced to cancel at least four rallies elsewhere after crowds shouted insults and threw stones in response to an alleged bribery scandal involving his sister.
The ruling party’s campaign faced even more scandal when its main candidate resigned following allegations of ties to drug trafficking.
Protest signs called Milei a “persona non grata in Rosario” and called for “decent salaries” and an end to pension cuts.
A few blocks from Milei’s rally, several hundred people joined a protest march.
“In Rosario, the city that exports cereals to the world, there is hunger,” activist Eduardo Delmonte told AFP.
“We see the ships leaving the port loaded up with goods and wonder how we will eat tomorrow.”
Leonardo Gresso, a street vendor of tortillas, said he voted for Milei in 2023 but on Sunday will not choose any party.
“I had hope, today I don’t even have that.”


Hobbled by US tariffs, carpet weavers in India’s Kashmir struggle to stay afloat

Hobbled by US tariffs, carpet weavers in India’s Kashmir struggle to stay afloat
Updated 32 min 37 sec ago

Hobbled by US tariffs, carpet weavers in India’s Kashmir struggle to stay afloat

Hobbled by US tariffs, carpet weavers in India’s Kashmir struggle to stay afloat
  • Thousands of Indian artisans and weavers have been battered by US PresidentTrump’s move in August to double tariffs to 50 percent on Indian goods
  • Indian carpet and handicraft exports fell more than 16 percent in September from a year earlier, according to data from the trade ministry, forcing small manufacturers to cut jobs and shelve expansion plans

SRINAGAR: Gulzar Ahmad Bhat, a former carpet weaver in India’s Jammu and Kashmir region, now sells tea on the shores of the scenic Dal Lake, abandoning his craft of 35 years after increased US tariffs left him unable to afford his children’s school fees and medicine for his family of six.
Thousands of Indian artisans and weavers have been battered by US President Donald Trump’s move in August to double tariffs to 50 percent on Indian goods. Bhat, 49, hired a weaver to finish his last carpet before he laid down his tools.
“This profession is dying,” he told Reuters, days before he switched occupations.
The US buys nearly 60 percent of India’s handmade carpets, according to industry estimates.
The Himalayan region of Kashmir, with a handicraft industry that, according to the Jammu and Kashmir Industry Chamber, employs about 400,000 people, is known for its Persian-style tufted and knotted varieties.
Indian carpet and handicraft exports fell more than 16 percent in September from a year earlier, according to data from the trade ministry, forcing small manufacturers to cut jobs and shelve expansion plans.
“Business is slowing down because of the increase in US tariffs ... many workers are losing jobs and shifting to other work, causing a loss of traditional skills,” said Mujtaba Qadri of M&K Exports, which sells shawls and rugs — mainly to the US

A trade ministry official said New Delhi is trying to help affected exporters with financial incentives and by getting them to sell to new markets. But local exporters warned that this could take time.
The tariffs are affecting the peak export season from October to December and winter orders are getting stuck, leaving unsold goods in warehouses while threatening to wipe out an entire business cycle.
Third-generation carpet maker Mohammed Yaqoob Bafanda, 40, says the tariffs are just the latest blow to an already struggling industry.
His family business has shrunk from 100 handlooms during his father’s time to around 20 now, with the number of weavers also dropping from 300 to only “four or five,” he said.
“If a 50 percent tax continues, this industry will collapse,” Bafanda said. “I have 40 to 50 carpets in stock and no buyers.”


Rare Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow suburb injures five

Rare Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow suburb injures five
Updated 47 min 52 sec ago

Rare Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow suburb injures five

Rare Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow suburb injures five
  • The drone hit the 14th floor of a residential building in Krasnogorsk, on the western edge of Moscow, the governor of the Moscow region, Andrey Vorobyov, said on Telegram

KRASNOGORSK: A Ukraine drone crashed into an apartment block in a Moscow suburb on Friday, wounding a young boy and four others, officials said, as both countries traded another night of aerial strikes.
In a rare strike close to the Russian capital, the drone hit the 14th floor of a residential building in Krasnogorsk, on the western edge of Moscow, the governor of the Moscow region, Andrey Vorobyov, said on Telegram.
AFP reporters saw a hole in the building’s facade and rubble inside one destroyed apartment.
“The bang was loud,” local resident Maxim told AFP, adding that it sounded “almost identical” to a car crash.
Russia’s defense ministry said it downed 111 Ukrainian drones overnight, most of them over the southern region of Rostov. Nobody was wounded, but the strikes cut power to at least 1,500 residents, Governor Yuri Slyusar said.
Russian shelling on Ukraine killed two people and wounded at least 17 in the southern city of Kherson, the Kherson region’s press office told AFP.
Russia has intensified heavy bombardments of Ukraine, targeting energy infrastructure ahead of winter. Rolling power cuts have been introduced across the country in recent days, including Kyiv, as the country rations electricity.
Kyiv’s air force said Moscow fired 128 drones during the night.
Ukraine has launched retaliatory strikes, typically hitting Russia’s energy infrastructure and oil refineries in a bid to cut Moscow’s export revenues.
Though it does target Moscow and its surrounding area, often forcing airport closures, hits are rare.
Kyiv’s Western allies have ratcheted up pressure on Moscow as the war enters a fourth winter, with the United States and European Union announcing new sanctions this week on Russian energy aimed at crippling its war economy.
EU leaders also took steps toward funding Ukraine’s defense for another two years, although they stopped short of approving a mammoth “reparations loan” backed by frozen Russian assets.