Asian Economies in Rush to Cut Tariff Deals as US Deadline Moves

Asian countries including Japan and South Korea said they’ll keep pushing for a better deal for their exports to the US after President Donald Trump shifted his tariff deadline to Aug. 1 and tweaked the rates he’s set for many economies.

In his first wave of letters to key trading partners, Trump announced levies of 25% on goods from Japan and South Korea, with rates for Indonesia and Thailand set at over 30%. The US president also signed an executive order holding off the new duties until Aug. 1.

The extension by Trump leaves economies across Asia — including some of America’s closest allies on the continent — squarely in the US administration’s tariff sights while giving officials a little over three additional weeks to negotiate lower rates. Complicating such accords is the prospect of separate sectoral tariffs on products including cars, chips and pharmaceuticals that are critical industries for economies across Asia.

“For Trump, whether the US has a goods trade deficit with a country is more important than whether the country is an ally,” said David Boling, director of Japan Trade at consultancy Eurasia Group. “Trump’s tariffs will be a drag on regional growth because so many Asian countries depend on the US market for their exports.”

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