Donald Trump news: US President unveils United Kingdom trade deal, first since ‘reciprocal’ tariff pause

Kevin Breuninger
CNBC
President Donald Trump has outlined a new tariff deal with the UK
President Donald Trump has outlined a new tariff deal with the UK Credit: AAP

President Donald Trump has unveiled the broad outline of a trade agreement with the United Kingdom.

The deal is the first by the United States with a country whose imports were subject to new tariffs imposed by Trump in early April.

The US has a trade goods surplus with the UK.

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Many specifics about the deal were not immediately clear, and nothing was signed during the Oval Office event.

“The final details are being written up,” Trump said. “In the coming weeks we’ll have it all very conclusive.”

He said that the deal includes “billions of dollars of increased market access for American exports,” and that the U.K. will “reduce or eliminate numerous nontariff barriers that unfairly discriminated against American products.”

A fact sheet from the White House said that the trade deal will:

  • Keep in place a 10 per cent blanket U.S. tariff on U.K. imports
  • Adjust tariffs on U.K. autos so that the first 100,000 vehicles imported from U.K. car manufacturers each year are subject to a 10 per cent rate, and any additional vehicles face 25 per cent rates
  • Create a ”$US5 billion opportunity for new exports” for U.S. farmers, ranchers and producers, including more than $US700 million in ethanol exports and $US250 million in American beef and other agricultural products
  • Commit both countries to working together to enhance industrial and agricultural market access
  • Close loopholes and increase US firms’ competitiveness in the UK’s procurement market
  • Streamline customs procedures for US exports
  • Establish commitments on intellectual property, labor and the environment
  • Secure the supply chain of US aerospace manufacturers through preferential access to high-quality UK aerospace components
  • Create a secure supply chain for pharmaceutical products
  • Require the US to negotiate an “alternative arrangement to the Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum.” That includes creating a “new trading union for steel and aluminum.”

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who joined Trump remotely, said, “We’ve built an incredible platform for the future.”

But some experts downplayed the impact of the deal, saying the path taken that the US took with the UK cannot easily be repeated with other nations where America has a large trade deficit.

“It’s a very small win, and it’s limited in scope,” said Josh Lipsky, chair of international economics at the Atlantic Council, on CNBC’s “The Exchange” later Thursday.

While the Oval Office event was ongoing, Trump’s Truth Social account posted a screenshot indicating U.S. tariffs on the U.K. will stay at 10 per cent.

Asked if that baseline tariff is a template for future trade deals, Trump said, “That’s a low number.”

“They made a good deal,” Trump said of the U. “Some will be much higher because they have massive trade surpluses.”

The chart also shows that UK duties on U.S. goods will shrink from 5.1 per cent to 1.8 per cent. It was unclear Thursday how those figures were tabulated.

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said in the Oval Office that she will travel to the U.K. next week to continue talks over U.S. beef exports.

Trump earlier said on Truth Social that the agreement is “a full and comprehensive one,” adding, “Many other deals, which are in serious stages of negotiation, to follow!”

But 10 Downing Street suggested that negotiations with the US were ongoing.

“Talks on a deal between our countries have been continuing at pace and the Prime Minister will update later today,” a spokesperson for Starmer said in a statement overnight, after The New York Times first reported on the US-UK announcement.

The statement added that Starmer “will always act in Britain’s national interest,” and called the U. “an indispensable ally for both our economic and national security.”

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