City
Epaper

12 nations to get US tariff letters on Monday, says Trump

By IANS | Updated: July 5, 2025 12:54 IST

New Delhi/Washington, July 5 US President Donald Trump has signed tariff letters on exports from 12 countries, which ...

Open in App

New Delhi/Washington, July 5 US President Donald Trump has signed tariff letters on exports from 12 countries, which are expected to be sent out on July 7 (Monday).

Speaking to the media aboard Air Force One, the US President said the names of the countries which will receive the letters would only be revealed on Monday.

"I signed some letters and they'll go out on Monday, probably 12. Different amounts of money, different amounts of tariffs,” he told reporters.

"The letters are better. It is much easier to send a letter," Trump added.

Trump has suggested that the reciprocal tariffs could go even higher, potentially reaching 70 per cent for some countries, and take effect from August 1.

The US President in April unveiled a base tariff of 10 per cent on most goods entering the country, along with higher rates for certain countries, including China. Those elevated tariffs were later suspended till July 9.

Washington has concluded trade agreements with two countries - the United Kingdom and Vietnam.

Meanwhile, India's high-level official delegation, led by chief negotiator Rajesh Agrawal, has returned from Washington without reaching a final agreement with US officials on the sensitive issue of trade in agricultural and dairy products that the US is pushing for.

However, there is still a glimmer of hope that an interim bilateral trade agreement may be reached at the highest political level in the two countries before the July 9 deadline.

The Indian team was in Washington for negotiations on an interim trade agreement with the US from June 26 - July 2.

According to Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, India will not hurry into signing a free trade agreement under pressure from any deadline.

Speaking on the sidelines of an event in the national capital, Minister Goyal emphasised that India is ready to make trade deals in the national interest but it "never negotiates trade deals with a deadline".

The US is seeking broader market access for its agricultural and dairy products, which is a major hurdle, as for India, this is a livelihood issue for the country's small farmers, and hence, is considered a sensitive area.

While India is looking to secure an exemption from President Trump's 26 per cent tariffs by concluding an interim deal before July 9, it is also pushing for significant tariff concessions for its labour-intensive exports such as textiles, leather and footwear.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTrump ready to come to negotiating table with India over trade talks, says "look forward to speaking to PM Modi"

International"Situation is one of anarchy": Former Indian diplomat Sukh Deo Mani on Nepal protests

InternationalIndia, Iran, Armenia hold 3rd trilateral consultations in Tehran

InternationalQatar denies prior warning of Israeli strike, calls US claim "baseless"

InternationalTrump "felt very badly" about location of Doha attack, but backs Hamas elimination as "worthy goal", says White House

National Realted Stories

NationalTop Cong leaders to visit Bengal to overhaul the party, prepare strategy for 2026 Assembly polls

NationalOdisha DGP instructs cops to fast-track investigations into crimes against women

NationalOdisha Police submits preliminary chargesheet in FM College student death case

NationalGujarat: Ahmedabad to host 11th Asian Aquatics Championship 2025; official Jersey unveiled

NationalAnti-terrorist operation ends in J&K’s Kulgam district