Former US Trade Representative Katherine Tai came prepared on the eve of President Donald Trump’s big tariff announcement to talk about lumber — as a metaphor, not a trade war target. For veteran trade negotiators, she said tariffs are like the planks used to frame buildings — by themselves “morally neutral” and actually pretty boring. What matters is whether they’re used constructively or destructively. Read More: Trump’s Tariff Plans Still in Limbo Ahead of Rose Garden Event “You could take a bunch of 2-by-4s and you could build something. If you’ve got an architect’s blueprint in hand, you could build a deck, a house, a factory,” she said in an interview with Bloomberg TV. “Or you could take a pile of 2-by-4s and you could pick them up and you could swing them around your head and you could run down the street and break peoples’ windows with that 2-by-4 or threaten to beat people up with it.” Former USTR Katherine Tai on Bloomberg TV Tai noted Trump’s “incredible showman instincts” in hosting a Rose Garden ceremony about tariffs on Wednesday and managing to make an otherwise mundane accessory in a trade-policy toolbelt “really, really exciting.” Tai laid out several things she’ll be looking for in the White House announcement: - What legal authority is invoked? An international economic emergency declaration could be the basis for nearly immediate tariffs, she said, but using another legal framework could mean it takes more time to establish the basis for the import duties.
- What’s the product and country scope of tariffs? “Is it on everything under the sun” or is it focused on products, sectors and specific industries, she said, and will all or a limited number of trading partners be targeted?
- What’s level are the tariffs? Whether reciprocal tariff rates are “nice round numbers” like 10%, 25, 0r 50% or more precise figures like 17% or 19% will shed light on “whether or not any economic analysis has gone into the design of those tariffs.”
“Is there a house that we’re trying to build, or a factory that we’re trying to build?” Tai asked. “Or is it all just a giant performance of drama?” —Brendan Murray in London Bloomberg’s tariff tracker follows all the twists and turns of global trade wars. Click here for more of Bloomberg.com’s most-read stories about trade, supply chains and shipping. |