
US Imposes 20% Tariffs on EU Goods Trump's Reciprocal Policy Sparks Trade Tensions and Economic Uncertainty
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Headline news: In April 2025, President Donald Trump announced the launch of his Reciprocal Tariff Policy in a Rose Garden press conference, following a February presidential memorandum that labeled some European trade arrangements “harmful” to U.S. interests. This triggered a sharp increase in U.S. tariffs on many goods originating from the European Union, effective April 9, 2025. The new duty rate imposed by the U.S. now sits at 20 percent for a wide range of EU exports, a substantial jump from the pre-trade war average U.S. tariff rate of just 1.47 percent on EU products. In response, European leaders, including Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, have prepared a package of countermeasures, focusing first on American steel and aluminum, but have also emphasized their willingness to negotiate and remove barriers if the U.S. is open to compromise. For now, the EU’s retaliation package on steel has been paused to allow more space for negotiations, according to the European Commission’s most recent press releases.
While the United States retains the ability to raise tariffs even on goods that previously enjoyed free trade under various agreements, such as those not covered by the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, these measures have provoked considerable economic debate. Bruegel, a leading European economic think tank, reports that as long as these tariffs stay in place, the average bilateral tariff rate between the U.S. and EU is estimated at 9.9 percent—an increase of 8.4 percentage points compared to 2023. The European Commission’s economic forecasting team recently stated that the U.S. tariff hikes are expected to lower EU GDP by about 0.2 percent, with exports to the U.S. declining around 1.1 to 1.5 percent. Still, EU exporters may pick up market share in third countries as American products become less competitive due to both a stronger dollar and more expensive inputs. Interestingly, the impact is somewhat cushioned in Europe compared to Mexico or Canada, because European industries are less reliant on the U.S. as an export market.
On the negotiating front, the EU has floated the idea of reciprocal tariff-free trade with the United States, which would include American cars, a sector where the EU’s 10 percent tariff far exceeds the U.S. 2.5 percent rate. However, the White House appears hesitant to eliminate tariffs so broadly, but talks remain ongoing, and compromise is still on the table.
For listeners tracking the latest official rates, U.S. Customs and Border Protection released new 2025 European Union Tariff Rate Quota data, now reflecting these recent changes.
That’s all for today’s update. Thanks for tuning into the European Union Tariff News and Tracker. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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