Trump Vows Stronger Tariffs on China, Defends Trade Policy

US President Donald Trump has stated that tariffs will remain a key tool of US trade policy, targeting China and other countries for undercutting American businesses. He argued that current tariff levels may not be sufficient and pointed to sectors like furniture and manufacturing for protection. Trump linked tariffs to a revival in US manufacturing, claiming companies can avoid them by relocating production to the US. He described the US-China relationship as competitive but not adversarial, ahead of a planned meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Key Points: Trump Pushes Higher Tariffs on China, Defends Trade Policy

  • Trump signals tougher tariffs on China
  • Criticizes past trade policies as failures
  • Links tariffs to US manufacturing revival
  • Acknowledges legal challenges but cites alternative mechanisms
2 min read

Trump pushes tariffs, targets China

US President Donald Trump says tariffs will remain central to trade policy, signaling tougher measures against China and other nations to protect American businesses.

"The tariffs really aren't high enough in my opinion. - Donald Trump"

Washington, May 5

US President Donald Trump said tariffs would remain a central tool of US trade policy, signalling tougher measures against China and other countries he accused of undercutting American businesses.

Speaking at the White House, Trump said domestic firms had been hurt by cheaper imports. "You're getting hurt by China and other countries making a product that's not as good, but it's less money," he said ahread of his trip to China later this month.

He argued that tariffs were helping reverse that trend and boost revenues. "Because of the use of tariffs, we have all this money," Trump said.

The president indicated that current tariff levels may not be sufficient. "The tariffs really aren't high enough in my opinion," he said, pointing to sectors facing sustained pressure from foreign competition.

Trump said companies could avoid tariffs by relocating production to the United States. "If they come in and build a business here... there are no tariffs," he said.

He linked tariffs to a broader revival in US manufacturing. "We lost our car industry... and they're all coming back," Trump said, describing what he called a manufacturing boom.

He described US-China relationship as competitive but not adversarial. "We're leading China in AI... we have friendly competition," he said, ahead of a planned meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

At the same time, he criticised past trade policies. "We've been ripped off in this country for decades," Trump said, arguing that earlier administrations had failed to protect domestic industries.

He pointed to tariffs as a corrective measure. "It's made our country rich - really rich," he said.

Trump highlighted specific sectors, including furniture and manufacturing, where he said tariffs would help bring production back to the US. "We're going to bring all the furniture back... you're going to see it," he said.

He acknowledged legal challenges to tariff policies but said alternative mechanisms were being used. "We have other ways of tariffing... they're more tested, they're stronger," he said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally someone talking sense! China has been dumping cheap goods for years, hurting our local industries too. India should collaborate with US on this.
V
Vikram M
Trump says "friendly competition" but then threatens tariffs? Typical American double standards. India should strengthen ties with China and other Asian nations instead.
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Rohit P
As an Indian businessman, I see both sides. Tariffs protect local jobs, but they also increase costs for consumers. Modi ji should negotiate a good deal with Trump to protect our exports.
K
Kavya N
👏👏 Love how Trump is putting America first! We need similar protectionist policies in India to boost 'Make in India'. Enough of Chinese imports flooding our markets.
S
Siddharth J
Interestingly, this could actually benefit India. If US-China trade war escalates, global supply chains might shift to India. We have the talent and manufacturing potential. Let's seize this opportunity!
M
Meera T
Trump says "tariffs not high enough" - this is worrying. Indian IT firms like Infosys and TCS could face indirect consequences if US economy slows down due to protectionism.

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