White House tweets 14 tariff levels amid confusion after “liberation day”

More than a dozen countries for American mutual tariffs have not only spent the first day of President Donald Trump’s tariff rollout, but also with confusion about what rates they could face.

According to a Bloomberg Review of published data, when Trump announced his “Liberation Day” tariff in Rose Garden, at least 14 of the charts were separated at least 14 economies in the future. In each case, they were excessively more than one percent of the point.

On Thursday, the White House adjusted the annex rates downwards to reflect small numbers shown in the chart displayed by Trump.

This is important, because under the Executive Order implementing Trump’s mutual tariff policy, all American trading partners begin with 10% tariff from April 5. Four days later, the people listed in the annex – and only in the annex, their rates will increase for those who are determined in that document.

In the attachment document, India’s rate was originally listed at 27%, rather than 26%instead of the previously shown by Trump, later before revised up to 26%. South Korea was at 25%in the chart, then 26%in annex, now back 25%. Others with ups and downs included Botswana, Cameron, Malawi, Nicaragua, Norway, Pakistan, Philippines, Serbia, South Africa, Thailand, Vanuatu and Fuckland Islands.

A White House official said that the numbers in the Annex Implementation Documents would be effective.

Additionally, the property of some foreign sector and large countries – basically not visible in the attachment separate from its original nations with tariff lines listed in the charts of the White House.

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An island in the Indian Ocean between the Reunion, Mauritius and Madagascar, which is a foreign zone of France, was listed at 37% in Trump’s mutual tariff chart, but was not included in the formal attachment. St. Pierre and Mikelon, a French archipelago near Canada and an Australian region for two hours of the aircraft in the east of Brisbane, was left out of the tariff anx. France as a member of an European Union faces 20% mutual tariffs, while Australia is on a global minimum levy of 10%

(Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by NDTV employees and is published by a syndicated feed.)


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