International

War of Tariffs

Pakistan will be affected by how the world does business in the new emerging environment, and the country must construct institutionalised systems to manage the full spectrum of trade.

By Lt Gen (R) Tariq Khan | June 2025


On April 2nd, 2025, Liberation Day was proclaimed by US President Donald Trump, who announced his new ‘tariffs policy’. Whereas 60 countries, accused of being the ‘worst offenders,’ were singled out for higher tariffs selectively, yet almost all trading partners had tariffs levied against their goods as well. Those categorised as ‘offenders’ were those who had a trade imbalance with the US, exporting more to the US than importing from them. Trump accused them of ripping off America. He then immediately announced a 90-day pause but insisted that all would pay a 10% baseline tariff during this pause. Due to the uncertainty created, Trump and his associates were later accused of insider trading as the stocks fluctuated. This relief excluded China, against whom a 125% tariff was levied, which was later increased to 145% after China retaliated by gradually imposing a 125% tariff on US products.

Imposing tariffs on any product is simply applying a tax on it. This makes the product more expensive for the buyer but can (theoretically) create more revenue for the government. However, in real terms, the incremental raising of tariffs can eventually make the product too expensive for the market. Thus, the product is gradually removed from the market and supplied elsewhere, or it ceases to be produced. This is why China said it would not raise tariffs on US goods further since it would be a ‘joke.’ They said this because the tariff increase would have no practical manifestation after attaining a certain ceiling – these goods would never be sold! Simply stated, no one would be willing to buy a product whose tariff was more than the cost of production! So began the tariff wars that shook the world and challenged the global economic order.

The method to Trump’s madness was apparently premeditated, based on what he had always said he would do. Yet one wonders, was this decision based on patriotic fervour, ‘the America-First Syndrome,’ protecting US manufacturing and industry in a highly volatile and competitive economic world? Or was it simply a gut-based, impulsive decision based on intuition? Could it be that Trump believed that by upending the existing global order, he could negotiate with other nations from a stronger position, simply an aggressive posture? Were there prejudices involved when dealing with China, biases while dealing with Canada or Mexico, or even reservations, mistrust, and suspicion when dealing with Europe? It is still too early to say and difficult to assess at this point in time.

The situation is fluid, and respective nations are still working out the responses to it as each tries to make sense of the environment. It will take time for the dust to settle and for any new economic order to establish itself. In the meantime, the only financial regulator on international trade, i.e., the World Trade Organisation (WTO), has become totally dysfunctional. With the mandate to control tariffs, encourage free trade, and remove trade barriers, the WTO is now an irrelevant organisation - any new order will now, more or less, be governed by protectionism and nationalism.

Trump’s accusations of the US being ripped off are an exaggerated indictment when seen in the context of an increase in US GDP per capita by $55,075 since 1994. After adjusting for inflation, this translates to $26000 in GDP per capita, a 62% growth. Japan and Europe no longer lead the world in GDP per capita as they did in the 70s. (Source: Other Countries Are Not Ripping US off on Trade by Bryan Riley). On the other hand, if the US imports coffee beans from Brazil (35%) and Columbia (27%), with a collective cost of $4.8 billion its only because the US does not grow coffee beans, yet the Americans love to drink coffee – but that somehow, does not become obligatory for these countries to reciprocate and import an equivalent amount of goods/products from the US – though Columbia alone, imports goods to the tune of $15 billion from the US. On the other hand, China is not an accurate measure of the US accusation of being ripped off, since China was and still is a growing economy. Thus, its statistics will continue to show growth, which is not necessarily at the US’s cost.

Nevertheless, imposing tariffs in the manner in which it has been done has created misgivings the world over. The US will no longer be seen as a reliable trade partner. Instead, the US will be regarded as a loose cannon that could, at any given time, demolish trade conventions that the world had learnt to trust and rely on. In terms of economic growth, the effects of such an impulsive imposition of tariffs would be seen as highly disruptive, erratic, and lacking in consistency. This would generally put a hold on global investments as the corporate community would take a ‘wait-and-see’ approach, measuring the impact of this new phenomenon, before making new financial commitments, slowing down economic growth across its full spectrum.
The paradoxical outcomes of Trump’s philosophy indicate even bigger contradictions. His economic policy is tied up to his immigration policy. It is expected that with unprecedented deportations and immigrants, more jobs could be available for Americans, and unemployment may be reduced. But do Americans actually undertake such kinds of jobs that the majority of the immigrants were employed in? These included landscaping, janitorial, and manual labour sectors, where unemployment in the US was not a problem.

Read More