Trump planning more tariffs against any country with its own tariffs on U.S. goods
CBC
U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday asked his staff to come up with a plan to impose new tariffs on trading partners around the world that have economic practices he and his staff see as putting American trade at an "unfair" disadvantage.
The president ordered his economics team to study all of the country's trading partners and come up with a plan to counteract trade barriers that slow down the flow of U.S. products to foreign markets. Those barriers include other countries' existing tariffs on American imports, but trade regulations, sales taxes and exchange rates could also count.
The administration is planning to impose more tariffs — called reciprocal tariffs — on foreign countries to match the rates they charge on U.S. imports.
"We had a very unfair system to us … Everybody took advantage of the United States," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.
"Whatever countries charge the United States of America, we will charge them. No more, no less."
The move indicates Trump is looking to overhaul the nation's global trading relationships and encourage more spending on American industry, with tariffs as leverage — not just against enemies, but longtime allies like Canada, India and the European Union.
Reciprocal tariffs refer to tariffs where two countries impose similar taxes on each other's goods. (If your neighbour charged you $5 to borrow a carton of milk, for example, you'd respond by charging them at the same rate when they wanted a carton from you.)
Reciprocal tariffs would come on top of the tariffs Trump has already threatened to impose on other nations, including Canada.
Trump on Thursday singled out Canada's controversial digital sales tax, which imposes a three per cent tax on companies that provide digital services — like online advertising or shopping — and get more than $20 million of revenue from Canadian sources. (Think Google, Amazon or Apple.)
The United States has argued the tax discriminates against American companies.
"Only America should be allowed to tax American firms," a fact sheet from the White House said.
The president also sees Canada's general sales tax as a tariff, two senior Canadian government sources told Radio-Canada. He raised the issue during one of his calls with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Feb. 3. The sources say that Trudeau responded by noting there are several American states, including Florida, with sales taxes of their own.
Trump's issue is that Canada has a federal sales tax and the U.S. does not, a third source said.
The president also criticized Canada's NATO contributions on Thursday and said he'd argued with Trudeau about the decision to remove Russia from the alliance after its invasion of Ukraine.

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