What’s Going On With Trump’s Tariffs?
New tariff threat
Baseline or paused “reciprocal” rate
Preliminary deal
Map Size by 2024 imports
Mexico
Canada
South Korea
Thailand
Malaysia
Brazil
South Africa
Cambodia
Bangladesh
Iraq
Sri Lanka
Algeria
Kazakhstan
Libya
Tunisia
Serbia
Laos
Myanmar
Brunei
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Moldova
China
Taiwan
India
Switzerland
Israel
Norway
Venezuela
Nigeria
Guyana
Pakistan
Nicaragua
Jordan
Angola
Cote d'Ivoire
Madagascar
Botswana
Dem. Rep. Congo
Namibia
Fiji
Cameroon
Liechtenstein
Lesotho
Mauritius
Mozambique
North Macedonia
Zambia
Equatorial Guinea
Chad
Zimbabwe
Malawi
Vanuatu
Syria
Nauru
Germany
Japan
Vietnam
Ireland
Italy
Britain
France
Netherlands
Indonesia
Belgium
Spain
Sweden
Austria
Philippines
Poland
Hungary
Denmark
Slovakia
Finland
Czechia
Portugal
Slovenia
Romania
Greece
Lithuania
Bulgaria
Estonia
Croatia
Luxembourg
Latvia
Malta
Cyprus
Singapore
Colombia
Australia
Turkey
Chile
Saudi Arabia
Costa Rica
Peru
Ecuador
United Arab Emirates
Dominican Republic
Argentina
New Zealand
Honduras
Guatemala
Trinidad and Tobago
Russia
Egypt
El Salvador
Morocco
Qatar
Bahamas
Kuwait
Oman
Uruguay
Bahrain
Ghana
Ukraine
Iceland
Kenya
Haiti
Panama
Bolivia
Ethiopia
Jamaica
Paraguay
Lebanon
Senegal
Tanzania
Gabon
Georgia
Azerbaijan
Uganda
Albania
Armenia
Nepal
Suriname
Togo
Belize
Papua New Guinea
Liberia
Benin
Barbados
Monaco
Uzbekistan
Djibouti
Kosovo
Rwanda
Sierra Leone
Maldives
Mongolia
San Marino
Antigua and Barbuda
Eswatini
Afghanistan
Belarus
Marshall Islands
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Kyrgyzstan
Montenegro
Turkmenistan
Grenada
Sudan
Yemen
Niger
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Saint Lucia
Iran
Guinea
Timor-Leste
Samoa
Mali
Cuba
Tajikistan
Burkina Faso
Cape Verde
Burundi
Andorra
Bhutan
Mauritania
Tonga
Somalia
Micronesia
Palau
Dominica
Gambia
Comoros
Central African Republic
Solomon Islands
Eritrea
South Sudan
Kiribati
Sao Tome and Principe
Tuvalu
Guinea-Bissau
North Korea
Republic of the Congo
By Lazaro Gamio and Tony Romm
July 28, 2025
Share full article
Since returning to office, President Trump has waged a global trade war without parallel in modern history. With steep and sometimes punishing tariffs on America’s friends and foes alike, the president has sought to reset the world trading order, raise new federal revenue and pressure private businesses to make more of their products in the United States.
But Mr. Trump’s campaign is only beginning — and whether he will succeed remains an open question with great consequence for the U.S. economy.
On Aug. 1, the president is set to impose another round of taxes on imports from many countries, including Canada and Mexico, with rates up to 50 percent. Those are on top of the tariffs that the White House has already announced on other nations or negotiated through recent deals, as well as specific products, including foreign cars.
Mr. Trump’s actions threaten to revive a style of trade brinkmanship that has previously rattled markets, and it will likely result in price increases on American consumers and businesses. Here’s where the tariffs stand.
New threats Paused high rates Preliminary deals China Canada and Mexico Baseline tariffs Industry-specific What’s next?
Rates as high as 50 percent could begin on Aug. 1.
Map Size by 2024 imports
Mexico
Canada
South Korea
Thailand
Malaysia
Brazil
South Africa
Cambodia
Bangladesh
Iraq
Sri Lanka
Algeria
Kazakhstan
Libya
Tunisia
Serbia
Laos
Myanmar
Brunei
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Moldova
China
Taiwan
India
Switzerland
Israel
Norway
Venezuela
Nigeria
Guyana
Pakistan
Nicaragua
Jordan
Angola
Cote d'Ivoire
Madagascar
Botswana
Dem. Rep. Congo
Namibia
Fiji
Cameroon
Liechtenstein
Lesotho
Mauritius
Mozambique
North Macedonia
Zambia
Equatorial Guinea
Chad
Zimbabwe
Malawi
Vanuatu
Syria
Nauru
Germany
Japan
Vietnam
Ireland
Italy
Britain
France
Netherlands
Indonesia
Belgium
Spain
Sweden
Austria
Philippines
Poland
Hungary
Denmark
Slovakia
Finland
Czechia
Portugal
Slovenia
Romania
Greece
Lithuania
Bulgaria
Estonia
Croatia
Luxembourg
Latvia
Malta
Cyprus
Singapore
Colombia
Australia
Turkey
Chile
Saudi Arabia
Costa Rica
Peru
Ecuador
United Arab Emirates
Dominican Republic
Argentina
New Zealand
Honduras
Guatemala
Trinidad and Tobago
Russia
Egypt
El Salvador
Morocco
Qatar
Bahamas
Kuwait
Oman
Uruguay
Bahrain
Ghana
Ukraine
Iceland
Kenya
Haiti
Panama
Bolivia
Ethiopia
Jamaica
Paraguay
Lebanon
Senegal
Tanzania
Gabon
Georgia
Azerbaijan
Uganda
Albania
Armenia
Nepal
Suriname
Togo
Belize
Papua New Guinea
Liberia
Benin
Barbados
Monaco
Uzbekistan
Djibouti
Kosovo
Rwanda
Sierra Leone
Maldives
Mongolia
San Marino
Antigua and Barbuda
Eswatini
Afghanistan
Belarus
Marshall Islands
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Kyrgyzstan
Montenegro
Turkmenistan
Grenada
Sudan
Yemen
Niger
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Saint Lucia
Iran
Guinea
Timor-Leste
Samoa
Mali
Cuba
Tajikistan
Burkina Faso
Cape Verde
Burundi
Andorra
Bhutan
Mauritania
Tonga
Somalia
Micronesia
Palau
Dominica
Gambia
Comoros
Central African Republic
Solomon Islands
Eritrea
South Sudan
Kiribati
Sao Tome and Principe
Tuvalu
Guinea-Bissau
North Korea
Republic of the Congo
Many countries are set to see higher tariffs beginning Aug. 1. Some have learned in recent weeks about the new duties that will soon be applied to their goods in the United States. Others will be subject to taxes that the president announced and suspended earlier this year. And still more nations have brokered agreements with the United States that lower the rates they might have faced otherwise.
In the first camp are roughly two dozen countries that have received letters spelling out the higher tariff rates that will apply to their goods beginning next month unless they can strike a last-minute trade truce with the White House.
Taxes on imports from South Korea would rise to 25 percent, and the duties on Thailand’s goods would be set at 36 percent. The highest, so far, would be Brazil, which would see tariffs hit 50 percent next month.
Mr. Trump announced that tariff in a searing letter that attacked Brazilian leaders for their treatment of former President Jair Bolsonaro, an ally of Mr. Trump who is facing charges for inciting a coup.
In each of his letters, Mr. Trump said he would ratchet up the taxes on imports even higher if countries retaliated against the United States. He also said that the duties are separate from those he has applied to specific sectors.
For some, the steepest tariffs — paused in April — may soon take effect.
Map Size by 2024 imports
Mexico
Canada
South Korea
Thailand
Malaysia
Brazil
South Africa
Cambodia
Bangladesh
Iraq
Sri Lanka
Algeria
Kazakhstan
Libya
Tunisia
Serbia
Laos
Myanmar
Brunei
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Moldova
China
Taiwan
India
Switzerland
Israel
Norway
Venezuela
Nigeria
Guyana
Pakistan
Nicaragua
Jordan
Angola
Cote d'Ivoire
Madagascar
Botswana
Dem. Rep. Congo
Namibia
Fiji
Cameroon
Liechtenstein
Lesotho
Mauritius
Mozambique
North Macedonia
Zambia
Equatorial Guinea
Chad
Zimbabwe
Malawi
Vanuatu
Syria
Nauru
Germany
Japan
Vietnam
Ireland
Italy
Britain
France
Netherlands
Indonesia
Belgium
Spain
Sweden
Austria
Philippines
Poland
Hungary
Denmark
Slovakia
Finland
Czechia
Portugal
Slovenia
Romania
Greece
Lithuania
Bulgaria
Estonia
Croatia
Luxembourg
Latvia
Malta
Cyprus
Singapore
Colombia
Australia
Turkey
Chile
Saudi Arabia
Costa Rica
Peru
Ecuador
United Arab Emirates
Dominican Republic
Argentina
New Zealand
Honduras
Guatemala
Trinidad and Tobago
Russia
Egypt
El Salvador
Morocco
Qatar
Bahamas
Kuwait
Oman
Uruguay
Bahrain
Ghana
Ukraine
Iceland
Kenya
Haiti
Panama
Bolivia
Ethiopia
Jamaica
Paraguay
Lebanon
Senegal
Tanzania
Gabon
Georgia
Azerbaijan
Uganda
Albania
Armenia
Nepal
Suriname
Togo
Belize
Papua New Guinea
Liberia
Benin
Barbados
Monaco
Uzbekistan
Djibouti
Kosovo
Rwanda
Sierra Leone
Maldives
Mongolia
San Marino
Antigua and Barbuda
Eswatini
Afghanistan
Belarus
Marshall Islands
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Kyrgyzstan
Montenegro
Turkmenistan
Grenada
Sudan
Yemen
Niger
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Saint Lucia
Iran
Guinea
Timor-Leste
Samoa
Mali
Cuba
Tajikistan
Burkina Faso
Cape Verde
Burundi
Andorra
Bhutan
Mauritania
Tonga
Somalia
Micronesia
Palau
Dominica
Gambia
Comoros
Central African Republic
Solomon Islands
Eritrea
South Sudan
Kiribati
Sao Tome and Principe
Tuvalu
Guinea-Bissau
North Korea
Republic of the Congo
When Mr. Trump unveiled many of his initial tariffs in April, he described the staggering rates as “reciprocal.” He derived the duties from a formula – widely questioned by experts – relative to the size of the U.S. trade deficit with each nation.
Soon after announcing the tariffs, Mr. Trump halted them for 90 days, in a pause that was set to expire in early July. But Mr. Trump extended the pause again this month as part of his renewed push to strike trade deals before Aug. 1. (For China, the date is Aug. 12, under a deal it brokered with U.S. officials.)
It is unclear if the president plans to reimpose these exact tariffs or modify them in some way. For the moment, though, his executive order would see his “reciprocal” rates implemented next month for countries that haven’t been told otherwise.
The White House has struck agreements with major trading partners, including the European Union.
Map Size by 2024 imports
Mexico
Canada
South Korea
Thailand
Malaysia
Brazil
South Africa
Cambodia
Bangladesh
Iraq
Sri Lanka
Algeria
Kazakhstan
Libya
Tunisia
Serbia
Laos
Myanmar
Brunei
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Moldova
China
Taiwan
India
Switzerland
Israel
Norway
Venezuela
Nigeria
Guyana
Pakistan
Nicaragua
Jordan
Angola
Cote d'Ivoire
Madagascar
Botswana
Dem. Rep. Congo
Namibia
Fiji
Cameroon
Liechtenstein
Lesotho
Mauritius
Mozambique
North Macedonia
Zambia
Equatorial Guinea
Chad
Zimbabwe
Malawi
Vanuatu
Syria
Nauru
Germany
Japan
Vietnam
Ireland
Italy
Britain
France
Netherlands
Indonesia
Belgium
Spain
Sweden
Austria
Philippines
Poland
Hungary
Denmark
Slovakia
Finland
Czechia
Portugal
Slovenia
Romania
Greece
Lithuania
Bulgaria
Estonia
Croatia
Luxembourg
Latvia
Malta
Cyprus
Singapore
Colombia
Australia
Turkey
Chile
Saudi Arabia
Costa Rica
Peru
Ecuador
United Arab Emirates
Dominican Republic
Argentina
New Zealand
Honduras
Guatemala
Trinidad and Tobago
Russia
Egypt
El Salvador
Morocco
Qatar
Bahamas
Kuwait
Oman
Uruguay
Bahrain
Ghana
Ukraine
Iceland
Kenya
Haiti
Panama
Bolivia
Ethiopia
Jamaica
Paraguay
Lebanon
Senegal
Tanzania
Gabon
Georgia
Azerbaijan
Uganda
Albania
Armenia
Nepal
Suriname
Togo
Belize
Papua New Guinea
Liberia
Benin
Barbados
Monaco
Uzbekistan
Djibouti
Kosovo
Rwanda
Sierra Leone
Maldives
Mongolia
San Marino
Antigua and Barbuda
Eswatini
Afghanistan
Belarus
Marshall Islands
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Kyrgyzstan
Montenegro
Turkmenistan
Grenada
Sudan
Yemen
Niger
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Saint Lucia
Iran
Guinea
Timor-Leste
Samoa
Mali
Cuba
Tajikistan
Burkina Faso
Cape Verde
Burundi
Andorra
Bhutan
Mauritania
Tonga
Somalia
Micronesia
Palau
Dominica
Gambia
Comoros
Central African Republic
Solomon Islands
Eritrea
South Sudan
Kiribati
Sao Tome and Principe
Tuvalu
Guinea-Bissau
North Korea
Republic of the Congo
Issuing his initial pause, Mr. Trump sought to broker 90 deals in 90 days, as one of his advisers described it. That never materialized, though the president has struck a series of trade agreements with a handful of nations, including those in the European Union, which announced a preliminary agreement with the United States on Sunday.
That deal would set tariffs on E.U. goods at 15 percent, in exchange for better market access for U.S. goods and other concessions. The Trump administration has not released detailed terms of the arrangement.
Last week, the president announced a deal with Japan that calls for a 15 percent tariff on that country’s exports to the United States while relaxing duties that had applied to the Japanese auto industry. Japan agreed to supply $550 billion for investment in the United States.
The White House has previously announced similar framework agreements with Britain, Vietnam, the Philippines and Indonesia. The Indonesia deal, which Mr. Trump also announced last week, set its tariff rate at 19 percent. For several countries, the deals impose higher duties on goods that use a significant portion of parts or raw materials from countries including China and Russia.
Some of the highest tariffs have been reserved for the world’s second-largest economy.
“Fentanyl”tariff
Rateincreases
”Reciprocal“tariff
Rate increases as China punches back
Highest level
Negotiated truce rate
Feb. 1
March 4
April 2
May 12
The United States has set a 30 percent baseline tariff on imports from China under an agreement in May thatwalked back, at least for now, a highly damaging tit-for-tat escalation of duties between the two superpowers. (Other tariffs may also apply to Chinese goods.)
The deadline for the current rate to expire is Aug. 12, though American officials have said they may push the date as talks continue. Mr. Trump has said that tariffs could rise again without a new deal. But he signaled that it would be less than the 145 percent rate the U.S. government had imposed at one point in April, as the two sides escalated trade penalties on each other.
China has long been a target for Mr. Trump dating back to his first term. Upon returning to office, he initially sought to penalize Beijing for failing to stem the flow of fentanyl into the United States.
Two of America’s closest trading partners face steep tariffs, though many goods may be exempted.
Two of America’s largest trading partners may also see tariffs rise on some of their exports to the United States beginning Aug. 1. For Canada, that new rate would be 35 percent; for Mexico, 30 percent.
White House officials say the rates would apply to imports from the two countries that are not covered under a trade deal that Mr. Trump signed during his first term. But the president’s aides have cautioned that a decision on the matter is not final.
2021 ’21
2022 ’22
2023 ’23
2024 ’24
2025 ’25
May 2025 58%
2021 ’21
2022 ’22
2023 ’23
2024 ’24
2025 ’25
May 2025 48%
Mr. Trump first targeted Canada and Mexico in February, announcing a 25 percent import tax on all arriving goods, which the president justified by saying the two nations had not sufficiently helped to combat the flow of fentanyl. Facing blowback domestically and abroad, he later paused and modified that arrangement to exempt items that are covered under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or U.S.M.C.A.
These broad tariffs are separate from duties that Mr. Trump has imposed on specific imports and industries, including foreign cars and auto parts. Those tariffs also affect Canada and Mexico, with some key exceptions for products covered by U.S.M.C.A.
Even the smallest nations are already subject to a baseline tax on their imports.
Map Size by 2024 imports
Mexico
Canada
South Korea
Thailand
Malaysia
Brazil
South Africa
Cambodia
Bangladesh
Iraq
Sri Lanka
Algeria
Kazakhstan
Libya
Tunisia
Serbia
Laos
Myanmar
Brunei
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Moldova
China
Taiwan
India
Switzerland
Israel
Norway
Venezuela
Nigeria
Guyana
Pakistan
Nicaragua
Jordan
Angola
Cote d'Ivoire
Madagascar
Botswana
Dem. Rep. Congo
Namibia
Fiji
Cameroon
Liechtenstein
Lesotho
Mauritius
Mozambique
North Macedonia
Zambia
Equatorial Guinea
Chad
Zimbabwe
Malawi
Vanuatu
Syria
Nauru
Germany
Japan
Vietnam
Ireland
Italy
Britain
France
Netherlands
Indonesia
Belgium
Spain
Sweden
Austria
Philippines
Poland
Hungary
Denmark
Slovakia
Finland
Czechia
Portugal
Slovenia
Romania
Greece
Lithuania
Bulgaria
Estonia
Croatia
Luxembourg
Latvia
Malta
Cyprus
Singapore
Colombia
Australia
Turkey
Chile
Saudi Arabia
Costa Rica
Peru
Ecuador
United Arab Emirates
Dominican Republic
Argentina
New Zealand
Honduras
Guatemala
Trinidad and Tobago
Russia
Egypt
El Salvador
Morocco
Qatar
Bahamas
Kuwait
Oman
Uruguay
Bahrain
Ghana
Ukraine
Iceland
Kenya
Haiti
Panama
Bolivia
Ethiopia
Jamaica
Paraguay
Lebanon
Senegal
Tanzania
Gabon
Georgia
Azerbaijan
Uganda
Albania
Armenia
Nepal
Suriname
Togo
Belize
Papua New Guinea
Liberia
Benin
Barbados
Monaco
Uzbekistan
Djibouti
Kosovo
Rwanda
Sierra Leone
Maldives
Mongolia
San Marino
Antigua and Barbuda
Eswatini
Afghanistan
Belarus
Marshall Islands
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Kyrgyzstan
Montenegro
Turkmenistan
Grenada
Sudan
Yemen
Niger
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Saint Lucia
Iran
Guinea
Timor-Leste
Samoa
Mali
Cuba
Tajikistan
Burkina Faso
Cape Verde
Burundi
Andorra
Bhutan
Mauritania
Tonga
Somalia
Micronesia
Palau
Dominica
Gambia
Comoros
Central African Republic
Solomon Islands
Eritrea
South Sudan
Kiribati
Sao Tome and Principe
Tuvalu
Guinea-Bissau
North Korea
Republic of the Congo
Some countries have not been targeted with specific new tariff threats. Instead, they are subject to a flat, 10 percent tariff on all imports into the United States, under an order Mr. Trump signed earlier this year.
Tariffs target products deemed by Mr. Trump to be essential to national security.
Active
50
About 20 percent of steel is imported.
Active
50
Half of aluminum imports come from Canada.
Active
25
Nearly half of all vehicles sold in the United States are imported.
In process
—
Chile and Canada are major sources of copper imports.
In process
—
The United States is the largest buyer of Canadian lumber.
In process
—
A number of Asian countries are major sources.
In process
—
China and India are major suppliers of generic medications.
In process
—
Mexico and Canada account for 80 percent of imports.
In process
—
China controls the world market for rare-earth minerals.
In process
—
The aerospace industry relies on specialized global suppliers.
In process
—
A key ingredient in semiconductors and solar panels.
In process
—
The majority of commercial drones are made in China.
Several of Mr. Trump’s tariffs target specific products or industries, using a provision of federal law – Section 232 – meant to help the president address trade issues that present national security threats.
Since the start of his second term, Mr. Trump has announced these duties on imports of aluminum, foreign cars and car parts and steel. In some cases, these tariffs supplement the duties targeted at specific countries, and the taxes do not pile on top of each other. For others, like the European Union, agreements brokered with the United States would override the sector-specific duties.
The president has started the process to impose additional sector-specific tariffs on products including copper, pharmaceuticals and semiconductors.
The president has shown no sign of slowing down, but has pushed deadlines in the past.
Combined, the tariffs Mr. Trump has imposed this year mean the vast majority of goods that enter the United States now are subject to higher import taxes. Those duties are paid by the companies that import the goods, raising the risk that U.S. businesses and consumers will soon see higher prices. Mr. Trump insists otherwise, arguing that foreign producers will essentially eat the costs.
Mr. Trump also has shown no signs of slowing down with what has been an on-again-off-again trade war.
The president and his top aides repeatedly have said they do not plan to extend their upcoming Aug. 1 deadline. But Mr. Trump has announced, then relaxed, some of his toughest trade policies in a bid to buy more time to negotiate deals.
“Fentanyl” “Reciprocal” Temporary Baseline New threat Deal level
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 24 10 — 25 15
Preliminary deal reached — 46 10 — — 20
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — — — 10 — 10
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 32 10 — 32 19
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 17 10 — 17 19
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Preliminary deal reached — 20 10 — 20 15
Renewed tariff threat 25 — — — 30 —
Renewed tariff threat 25 — — — 35 —
Renewed tariff threat — 25 10 — 25 —
Renewed tariff threat — 36 10 — 36 —
Renewed tariff threat — 24 10 — 25 —
Renewed tariff threat — — — 10 50 —
Renewed tariff threat — 30 10 — 30 —
Renewed tariff threat — 49 10 — 36 —
Renewed tariff threat — 37 10 — 35 —
Renewed tariff threat — 39 10 — 30 —
Renewed tariff threat — 44 10 — 30 —
Renewed tariff threat — 30 10 — 30 —
Renewed tariff threat — 27 10 — 25 —
Renewed tariff threat — 31 10 — 30 —
Renewed tariff threat — 28 10 — 25 —
Renewed tariff threat — 37 10 — 35 —
Renewed tariff threat — 48 10 — 40 —
Renewed tariff threat — 44 10 — 40 —
Renewed tariff threat — 24 10 — 25 —
Renewed tariff threat — 35 10 — 30 —
Renewed tariff threat — 31 10 — 25 —
Reciprocal tariff paused 20 125 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 32 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 26 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 31 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 17 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 15 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 15 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 14 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 38 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 29 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 18 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 20 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 32 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 21 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 47 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 37 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 11 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 21 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 32 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 11 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 37 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 50 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 40 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 16 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 33 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 17 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 13 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 13 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 18 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 17 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 22 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 41 10 — — —
Reciprocal tariff paused — 30 10 — — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Baseline tariff — — — 10 — —
Show 183 more rows +
Share full article
……Read full article on The New York Times-World
Tax
Comments
Leave a comment in Nestia App