| Thu, 03 Apr 2025 13:01:52 GMTwww.bbc.com
How were Donald Trump's tariffs calculated?
How were Donald Trump's tariffs calculated?
1 hour ago Share Save Ben Chu & Tom Edgington BBC Verify Share Save
Getty Images
US President Donald Trump has imposed a 10% tariff on goods from most countries being imported into the US, with even higher rates for what he calls the "worst offenders". But how exactly were these tariffs - essentially taxes on imports - worked out? BBC Verify has been looking at the calculations behind the numbers.
What were the calculations?
When Trump presented a giant cardboard chart detailing the tariffs in the White House Rose Garden it was initially assumed that the charges were based on a combination of existing tariffs and other trade barriers (like regulations). But later, the White House published what might look like a complicated mathematical formula.
White House The formula shared by the White House
But the actual exercise boiled down to simple maths: take the trade deficit for the US in goods with a particular country, divide that by the total goods imports from that country and then divide that number by two. A trade deficit occurs when a country buys (imports) more physical products from other countries than it sells (exports) to them. Punitive or a gift? How five big economies see new Trump tariffs
Trump's tariffs are a longtime goal fulfilled - and his biggest gamble yet
How Trump's tariffs might affect you and your money For example, the US buys more goods from China than it sells to them - there is a goods deficit of $295bn. The total amount of goods it buys from China is $440bn. Dividing 295 by 440 gets you to 67% and you divide that by two and round up. Therefore the tariff imposed on China is 34%. Similarly, when it applied to the EU, the White House's formula resulted in a 20% tariff.
Are the Trump tariffs 'reciprocal'?
Many commentators have pointed out that these tariffs are not reciprocal. Reciprocal would mean they were based on what countries already charge the US in the form of existing tariffs, plus non-tariff barriers (things like regulations that drive up costs). But the White House's official methodology document makes clear that they have not calculated this for all the countries on which they have imposed tariffs. Instead the tariff rate was calculated on the basis that it would eliminate the US's goods trade deficit with each country. Trump has broken away from the formula in imposing tariffs on countries that buy more goods from the US than they sell to it. For example the US does not currently run goods trade deficit with the UK. Yet the UK has been hit with a 10% tariff. In total, more than 100 countries are covered by the new tariff regime.
'Lots of broader impacts'
Trump believes the US is getting a bad deal in global trade. In his view, other countries flood US markets with cheap goods - which hurts US companies and costs jobs. At the same time, these countries are putting up barriers that make US products less competitive abroad. So by using tariffs to eliminate trade deficits, Trump hopes to revive US manufacturing and protect jobs.
Reuters The US car industry is one of the manufacturing sectors Trump is keen to revive