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Within 2 weeks, President Donald Trump said, he will establish new tariff rates. He intends to send official letters to international trading partners informing them of the July 9 deadline. A number of significant economies will be subject to these tariffs.

“We’ll send letters in about a week and a half, maybe two weeks,” Trump stated while speaking at the John F. Kennedy Centre in Washington. “This is the deal—take it or leave it,” he continued.

Trump to set tariff rates has become a recurring element in his trade policies. He threatened to declare new tariffs in three weeks on May 16, and nothing happened. In April, he suggested rising tariffs but postponed them by 90 days when markets responded negatively.

Limited Deals and Focused Trade Talks

The United States has only negotiated a trade agreement with the United Kingdom thus far. A tenuous tariff truce with China is still in effect. To settle differences, negotiators from both sides convened in London this week.

The agreement with China is finalised, according to Trump. China will supply rare earth materials as well magnets as part of the agreement. The United States will permit Chinese students to enrol in American universities in return.

Trump stated that he was amenable to a potential extension of the deadline. But “I don’t think we’re going to need that,” he continued.

At first, Trump desired to engage in separate negotiations with each trading partner. Later, he turned his attention to important allies like the European Union, South Korea, Japan, and India. His government claims it is unable to oversee dozens of different negotiations concurrently.

The EU agreement will probably be one of the final ones, according to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick. He cited the primary reason as the challenge of negotiating with a bloc of 27 nations.

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