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Trump Says Canada, Mexico Tariffs to Take Effect, Adds New China Duty

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President Donald Trump said 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico are on track to go into place on March 4, and said he would impose an additional 10% tax on Chinese imports, moves that would deepen his fight with the nation’s largest trading partners.

The president paused the sweeping duties on Canada and Mexico on Feb. 3 for one month after both countries’ leaders announced new border security measures. But the US president had recently sowed confusion about whether they would take effect once the grace period ended.

Trump said Thursday in a social media post that drugs from the US’s North American neighbors are still entering “at very high and unacceptable levels.”

“We cannot allow this scourge to continue to harm the USA, and therefore, until it stops, or is seriously limited, the proposed TARIFFS scheduled to go into effect on MARCH FOURTH will, indeed, go into effect, as scheduled,” the president wrote. “China will likewise be charged an additional 10% Tariff on that date.”

The new tariffs on China come on top of a previous 10% duty he allowed to take effect earlier this month, when he delayed tariffs on Canada and Mexico. The 25% tariffs apply to all Canadian and Mexican imports, except for energy products from Canada, which will be taxed at 10%.

Trump’s brinkmanship puts North America back on the precipice of a trade war, which economists say would hurt US growth, worsen inflation and possibly spark recessions in Mexico and Canada. Those countries plus China are the three biggest sellers to the US. If there’s no last-minute reprieve, March 4 will see taxes ramped up on well over $1 trillion of imports.

Trump’s latest tariff threat rattled financial markets. The US dollar soared on Thursday morning, sending Canada’s loonie and Mexico’s peso sliding.

Trump at a cabinet meeting on Wednesday appeared to conflate the North American tariffs, which are tied to drug trafficking and illegal migration, with separate reciprocal duties his administration has planned on nations worldwide.

“The April Second Reciprocal Tariff date will remain in full force and effect,” the president wrote on Thursday.

Trump has been disappointed thus far with the result of Canada and Mexico’s border security measures and sees most progress coming from the US side, according to a White House official who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe his thinking. The administration is now reviewing US overdose deaths as a key metric of the effectiveness of Canadian and Mexican initiatives. While Trump is bullish about enacting the tariffs, the official did not rule out the possibility of a deal prior to March 4.