Trump abruptly reversed course Wednesday, announcing a 90-day pause of the severe tariffs he had imposed on countries around the world just a week earlier.
“I think that people were jumping a little bit,” he said, acknowledging that market instability played a role in his decision to retreat. “They were getting a little bit yippy, a little bit afraid,” he added.
While pausing his broader tariff initiative — though maintaining a 10 percent “reciprocal” tariff on almost all countries, plus drastic measures targeting metals — Trump ratcheted up tariffs against China to 125 percent. That move, he posted on social media, was based “on the lack of respect that China has shown to the World’s Markets.” Beijing had retaliated against Trump, implementing its own massive tariffs on American imports.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, German Chancellor-designate Friedrich Merz and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez also exhaled over Trump’s climbdown.
“Let’s make the best of the next 90 days,” Tusk said Wednesday. According to Merz, the new measures announced by the U.S. showed the benefits of European unity, while Sánchez said it “seems to open the door to negotiation and thus to an agreement between countries.”