President Donald Trump on Monday said his administration was looking in to a "reciprocal tax" on imports.

The comment sparked concerns among economists, analysts, and industry groups that the US could impose higher tariffs on goods and trigger a trade war.



In what was supposed to be a week focused on infrastructure and the budget, President Donald Trump on Monday caught the eye of economists and policy analysts with an offhand comment that suggested a significant shift in American trade policy.

Trump said his administration was looking into a "reciprocal tax" on imports, a comment that took many aides by surprise, according to reports. Trump said the tax could apply to imports from countries that "are so-called allies, but they are not allies on trade."

"We won't charge them anything and we send them our product, same product as they're sending us; and they'll charge us 50 and 75% tax — and that's very unfair," Trump said during a White House meeting. "So we're going to be doing very much a reciprocal tax, and you'll be hearing about that during the week and during the coming months."

Trump appears to have been referring to the US's lower tariff rate, on average, compared with other large countries. The World Trade Organization found that the average US tariff rate in 2016 was 3.5% compared with 4.1% for Canada, 5.2% for the European Union, and 9.9% for China.

But the suggestion of imposing higher taxes on imports — in essence a tariff — raised alarm among economists and analysts who have long cited concerns that Trump may increase protectionist trade policies.

Christine McDaniel, a senior fellow at George Mason University's free-market think tank Mercatus Center, said such a move could directly affect consumers.

"First, it is an import tax," McDaniel said on Monday. "This tax will make our imports more expensive and reduce competition. For consumers, and as others have noted, a 10% tax on imports is akin to a 10% additional tax on your Walmart checkout. For businesses — many of whom rely on imported intermediate inputs — it will make their cost of doing business go up. Remember, 40% to 50% of US imports are intermediate goods. "

Industry groups also warned that it could set international trade on the wrong path. Dieter Kempf, the president of the German industrial trade group BDI, told Reuters that such a tax would be a step in the wrong direction for the US's relationships with the rest of the world.

"If the USA raises customs barriers, it could lead to a dangerous spiral," Kempf said. "Instead of thinking about penalties and new trade barriers, we should further extend transatlantic trade and investment relations."

Germany was the fifth-largest trading partner with the US in 2017 and was the destination of $53.5 billion worth of exports.

Trump is entering a key stretch on trade policy

Trump is entering a consequential period that will most likely define the administration's trade policy going forward.

The Department of Commerce announced new tariffs on solar-energy products and washing machines in January. Reviews of steel and aluminum imports are ongoing with an April 11 deadline. The administration is also renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Trump on Tuesday met with a bipartisan group of lawmakers to talk about trade and a coming review of steel and aluminum imports.

"You see what's happening with our steel and aluminum industries, they're being decimated by dumping from many countries — in particular one — but many countries," Trump said during the meeting. "They're dumping and destroying our industries and destroying the families of workers, and we can't let that happen."

One of the options being considered as part of the review, the president said, was a tariff.

"Part of the options would be tariffs coming in, as they dump steel they pay tariffs, substantial tariffs, which means the US would actually make a lot of money," Trump said. "And, probably our steel industry and our aluminum industry would come back into our country — right now it's decimated."

Chris Krueger, an analyst at Cowen Washington Research Group, said that while this may stoke fears among economists, Trump most likely views it as a necessary escalation.

"In theory, Trump's reciprocal tax would reset the US tariff on all foreign imports to the tariff from the similar U.S. export," Krueger said in a note to clients. "While some might see this as the opening of a global trade war to end all global trade wars, some in the White House (likely including the Commander in Chief) believe that the U.S. is already in a global trade war...and losing bigly."

Krueger said a broad-based tax on all imports would not be possible without congressional action, but the administration has numerous options to increase tariffs on a slew of products that could be enough to kick off a trade battle.

Watch Trump's comments from Tuesday's meeting: