
Trump threatens new 50% tariffs on China

Speaking at the White House on Monday, the US president said that he was not considering a pause on new tariffs to allow for negotiations with other countries.BBC reported.
"We're not looking at that. We have many, many countries that are coming to negotiate deals with us, and there are going to be fair deals," he said.
Trump reiterated his threat of 50% duties on Chinese goods if Beijing did not retract its counter-tariff plans by Tuesday. If imposed, US companies bringing in certain goods from China could face a 104% tax.
In a post on his social media platform, Truth Social, Trump said he would introduce the extra tariff unless China withdrew its own 34% counter-tariff on American goods, which it announced on Friday.
Trump said last Wednesday that he would impose a tax of 34% on Chinese imports as part of his "Liberation Day" that placed a minimum 10% levy on nearly all of America's trading partners.
If he does impose that, US companies would then pay a total rate of 104% on Chinese imports- as it comes on top of 20% tariffs already put in place in March and the 34% announced last week.
Trump said China had introduced its countermeasure "despite my warning that any country that Retaliates against the U.S. by issuing additional Tariffs... will be immediately met with new and substantially higher Tariffs".
Beijing shot back, saying that "pressuring or threatening China is not a right way to engage".
"The U.S. hegemonic move in the name of 'reciprocity' serves its selfish interests at the expense of other countries' legitimate interests and puts 'America first' over international rules," Chinese Embassy spokesperson Liu Pengyu said in a statement.
"This is a typical move of unilateralism, protectionism and economic bullying."
Speaking from the White House, the US president said there could be both permanent tariffs and negotiations.
"We have $36 trillion debt for a reason," he said, adding that the US would be talking to China among other countries to make a "fair deal and a good deal".
"It's now America first," the US president said.
The escalating tension between the US and China has increased fears of a global trade war. The tariffs would come as a major blow to China's manufacturers, for whom the US is a key market for exports.
Uncertainty around the tariffs led to a turbulent day on global stock markets.
Markets worldwide have tumbled since Trump announced fresh tariffs on imports from nearly all economies.
The value of US stock markets dropped sharply again on opening, while Europe's biggest markets, including London's FTSE 100, have all closed more than 4% down.
Asian share indexes nosedived, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng index falling by more than 13%, its biggest one-day fall since 1997.
The impact on the FTSE 100, America's S&P 500, Germany's Dax and Japan's Nikkei has been wide-ranging.