Trump takes America’s trade policies back to the 19th century
F ew expected him to go quite so far. In a stunning shift in American economic strategy, Donald Trump has yanked up tariffs across the board. On April 2nd, speaking from the Rose Garden of the White House, he declared that America would impose levies of 10% on all imports plus higher “reciprocal” rates—much higher in some cases—to get back at countries which, in his view, have treated America unfairly. Coming on top of other tariffs announced since his return to the White House, the result is that, in the space of ten weeks, he has erected a wall of protection around the American economy akin to that of the late 1800s (see chart).
He offers the only way out of a supremely difficult situation
How a Depression-era lending scheme became a trillion-dollar wheeze
Much will depend on the courage of Europe
A rush of new tariffs will hurt growth, raise prices and worsen inequality
What clergymen can learn from economists
Wall Street still needs more to coax it back. But non-American firms may be ready to return
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/04/03/trump-takes-americas-trade-policies-back-to-the-19th-century
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