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Trump orders new pharma tariff, reshapes metal duties

by David P.
2 hours ago
in Politics
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US President Donald Trump signed new tariff orders on the anniversary of 'Liberation Day,' when he imposed sweeping duties on virtually all trading partners last year. ©AFP

Washington (United States) (AFP) – US President Donald Trump on Thursday ordered new tariffs on certain medicines, alongside an overhaul of metal duties, doubling down on his trade agenda a year after unleashing trade wars on virtually all partners.

The latest pair of orders he signed piles pressure on pharmaceutical companies to manufacture more in the United States, while separately targeting firms that officials accuse of “artificially manipulating” metals prices. Finished products containing substantial amounts of steel, aluminum, and copper will also face a lower 25-percent tariff on their full value instead of being targeted for the amount of metals they contain, a move to simplify an onerous system for firms. It is not immediately clear how these would affect consumer prices, but a senior US official told reporters they did not expect to see any effect on affordability.

The moves come on the anniversary of what Trump had dubbed “Liberation Day,” when he announced varying tariff rates on goods from dozens of economies last year, roiling financial markets and snarling supply chains. Although the Supreme Court struck down these global tariffs this February, Trump has been working to reinstate duties using different authorities. His aim of “Liberation Day” was the rebirth of American industry, bringing an influx of jobs, revenue, and an investment boom—although critics argue that these have largely not taken place.

Making good on his threat last fall, one of Trump’s Thursday orders imposes a 100-percent tariff on patented pharmaceuticals made abroad unless countries struck trade deals to secure lower rates, or companies commit to building plants in the United States. Large companies will have 120 days to commit to “reshoring plans” before the steep duty kicks in, while smaller companies have a 180-day buffer, a senior US official told reporters. “We expect the lion’s share of the world’s patented pharmaceuticals to be building in America,” the official said. Those who commit to building manufacturing plants—to be completed by the end of Trump’s second presidency—will face a 20-percent tariff instead.

The European Union, Japan, South Korea, and Switzerland will be excluded from this plan and face a 15-percent pharma duty, due to trade deals they earlier struck with Washington. Britain meanwhile has secured a deal allowing UK-made medicines tariff-free access to the United States for three years as part of a broader pact, the US Trade Representative’s office said. Meanwhile, drug companies that reach “Most Favored Nation” pricing deals with the Trump administration, while also building plants in the United States, can also be exempt from the sharp pharma tariff. Generic pharmaceutical products are not subject to tariffs, and this will be reassessed in a year’s time, said a White House fact sheet.

The second order Trump signed reshapes his 50-percent tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper, pushing importers to pay the duty based on prices that American buyers are facing. It is set to take effect 12:01 am Eastern Time on Monday, a White House official told AFP. The senior administration official charged that “foreign countries were artificially manipulating” prices of imported metals in order to pay a lower tariff. The same proclamation called for finished products made with more than 15 percent of steel, aluminum, and copper to face a 25-percent tariff on their full value, rather than being targeted based on their metal content. “It’s a simplification and a fairness issue,” the official said.

Asked about cost of living concerns, which have flared ahead of midterm elections this year, the official maintained that this should not impact affordability for households. “These will not have an impact on the price of the good on the shelf,” the official insisted.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: PharmaceuticalsTariffsTrade War
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