On April 2, 2026 — dubbed “Liberation Day” by the White House — President Trump is set to announce reciprocal tariffs on virtually all US trading partners. The scale of this trade action is unprecedented in modern history, potentially affecting $3 trillion in annual global trade. Here’s what we know and what it means for markets.
What Are Reciprocal Tariffs?
The concept is simple: the US will impose tariffs on each country equal to what that country charges on American goods. Trump has argued that the US has been “ripped off” by trading partners who impose higher tariffs on US exports than America charges on their imports.
Key Country-Specific Tariffs (Reported)
- China: 54% (existing 20% + new 34% reciprocal)
- European Union: 20%
- India: 26%
- Japan: 24%
- South Korea: 25%
- Vietnam: 46%
- Taiwan: 32%
- Minimum universal tariff: 10% on all countries
Global Economic Impact
The Peterson Institute estimates that if fully implemented, these tariffs would:
- Reduce global trade by $800 billion annually
- Add 1.5-2% to US consumer prices (equivalent to a $3,800 per household “tax”)
- Shave 0.5% off global GDP growth in 2026-27
- Push the US economy close to recession territory
Market Response
Global markets have been in risk-off mode since the tariff details leaked. The S&P 500 has fallen 8% from its February peak. The MSCI Emerging Markets index is down 12%. Safe havens — gold, US Treasuries, Japanese yen, and Swiss franc — have rallied sharply.
The Negotiation Angle
Many analysts believe the extreme tariff rates are an opening negotiating position. India, Japan, South Korea, and the EU have all signaled willingness to offer trade concessions. The tariffs come with a 30-day implementation window, providing time for bilateral deals.
History suggests Trump uses tariffs as leverage rather than permanent policy. During his first term, the US-China “Phase 1” deal saw tariffs reduced after negotiations. Markets are pricing in a 50-60% chance of significant moderation before implementation.