The Trump administration’s protectionist measures on trade are piling up — and so are the retaliatory moves from a spate of other countries. What began with small-scale U.S. tariffs on washing machines and solar panels has now broadened to include steel and aluminum from all over the world, plus hundreds of products from China. Those tariffs have prompted a tit for tat response from affected countries, which target key U.S. exports such as bourbon, motorcycles, and orange juice. And there could be more to come, with the Trump administration studying further tariffs on imported cars and threatening much more action against China.

Here’s how the U.S. tariffs and international reprisals stand.

U.S. Tariffs

Country Affected Goods affected Tariff % Value of Affected Exports Threatened or Implemented All countries (South Korea, Argentina, Australia, and Brazil exempt due to voluntary export limits) Steel 25 percent $30 billion (U.S. 2017 imports) Implemented All countries (South Korea, Argentina, Australia, and Brazil exempt due to voluntary export limits) Aluminum 10 percent $17 billion (U.S. 2017 imports) Implemented All Countries Washing machines and solar panels 20 to 30 percent $10.3 billion (combined) Implemented All Countries Cars and auto parts 25 percent is being discussed $208 billion (cars only) Under consideration European Union Cars 20 percent $56 billion Threatened on June 22 China 818 different goods, broadly those that include “industrially significant technologies” 25 percent $50 billion, $34 billion currently implemented with an additional $16 billion to be implemented in two weeks Implemented China Not specified Not specified $200 billion Threatened on July 5 China Not specified Not specified, but if tariffs reach up to $500 billion of imports that would equate to roughly the total value of goods imported from China in 2017. $300 billion Threatened on July 5

International Retaliation

Country Affected Goods Affected Tariff Value of Affected Exports Implemented or Threatened China 659 U.S. products such as pork, soybeans, seafood, automobiles, and chemicals 25 percent A total of $50 billion: $34 billion will go into effect on July 6; the remaining $16 billion is under review Will be partially implemented on July 6 Canada Industrial metal such as steel and aluminum, as well as consumer products such as maple syrup, pizza, and toilet paper 10 percent or 25 percent depending on the item $12.6 billion Implemented Mexico U.S. products such as steel goods, cheese, cranberries, bourbon, and pork 20 percent or 25 percent depending on the item $3 billion Implemented European Union U.S. exports such as peanut butter, bourbon, orange juice, steel, and agricultural products 10 percent, 25 percent, 35 percent, or 50 percent depending on the item $3.2 billion Implemented Turkey 22 U.S. items including coal, paper, walnuts, almonds, tobacco, whiskey, automobiles, cosmetics, machinery, and petrochemical products 5 percent to 40 percent $1.8 billion Implemented Japan To be announced, as Japan is still weighing its options and has not released any concrete information about its retaliatory tariffs TBA $409 million Threatened India 29 items including lentils, almonds, walnuts, shrimp, apples, and some chemical and metal products 10 to 50 percent depending on the item $240 million* Implemented Russia Potentially targeting road construction equipment, among other products 25 percent to 40 percent $87.6 million* Implemented

*This number represents the projected value of the tariffs to these countries. The value of the goods affected by the tariffs could not be determined.