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An older man with light hair in a dark suit and red tie holds up a signed document in an outdoor setting with American flags in the background. A blue banner on the left reads "The Bulletin.
US President Donald Trump holds a signed executive order after announcing his global tariff programme in the White House rose garden. (Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

VideoApril 4, 2025

NZ counts the cost of Trump tariffs

An older man with light hair in a dark suit and red tie holds up a signed document in an outdoor setting with American flags in the background. A blue banner on the left reads "The Bulletin.
US President Donald Trump holds a signed executive order after announcing his global tariff programme in the White House rose garden. (Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images)

We may have got off comparatively lightly, but the global blast radius will impact NZ exporters and investors alike, writes Catherine McGregor in today’s extract from The Bulletin.

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‘Not the worst outcome in the world’

In what he grandly declared “Liberation Day” and a “declaration of economic independence,” President Donald Trump yesterday lobbed a 10% tariff at all goods imported from New Zealand – liberating local exporters, presumably, from the burden of price competitiveness in their second-largest market. The levy, part of a sweeping global package, is set to impact key industries including dairy, wine and meat, although at this stage it’s not certain how much. There’s also confusion over whether the 10% will sit on top of existing tariffs or replace them, with the executive order stating it is “additional to current tariffs” but trade minister Todd McClay saying the correct figure is still unclear.

Despite the uncertainty, McClay framed the outcome as relatively favourable, noting that “every country in the world faces a minimum of 10%”, reports Dan Brunskill at Interest.co.nz. Sense Partners economist John Ballingall agreed, calling the NZ tariff “not the worst outcome in the world” but warning that “some of the tariffs that he’s imposing on other countries are absolutely enormous, and that points to a pretty significant impact on global growth”.

AUT economics professor Niven Winchester goes so far as to suggest that New Zealand may even benefit from the trade war. According to his modelling published in The Conversation, if all nations imposed equivalent retaliatory tariffs on the US, New Zealand households would be “better off by $397 per year”.

The mystery 20% claim

Adding to the complexity is the Trump administration’s assertion that New Zealand imposes a 20% tariff on US goods – a figure McClay has pointed out is incorrect. New Zealand’s average tariff rate is just 1.9%, and even with GST included, it only reaches 17%.

The erroneous figure seems to stem from a crude calculation used by the Trump team to come up with the tariffs they claim each country levies on the US. On X, US journalist James Surowiecki was among the first to notice that “they didn’t actually calculate tariff rates + non-tariff barriers, as they say they did. Instead, they just took our trade deficit with that country and divided it by the country’s exports to us.” Newsroom’s Sam Sachdeva confirmed the math lines up: the 2024 US deficit with New Zealand was $1.1 billion, with $5.6 billion in NZ exports – yielding 19.6%, almost bang on Trump’s figure. As The Post’s Luke Malpass succinctly put it, “The numbers they are using – like an awful lot of what the president says – look like bullshit.”

No retaliation from NZ

New Zealand has no plans to implement tariffs on the US in retaliation, prime minister Christopher Luxon said, adding that escalating a trade war is “not good for New Zealand, it’s not good for the world”. This diplomatic restraint stands in contrast to the more assertive responses from other countries. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen announced the EU is “preparing for further countermeasures” to protect its economic interests, while China, Japan and South Korea have reportedly put aside their deep-rooted mutual animosity to work on a joint retaliation strategy. Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese has also ruled out retaliatory tariffs, but others, like Canada’s Mark Carney, have vowed to act with “purpose and with force” in responding to Trump’s moves.

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Stock market tanking

US stock markets have plunged overnight, with both the S&P and Nasdaq experiencing their worst trading days since September. The Dow Jones is also severely down, and all three indexes are on track to have their worst day since the inflation crisis of 2022, CNN reports. Global markets are likewise reeling on the back of fears that backlash from trading partners of the US will take down the global economy. The US dollar is at its weakest level since October. In theory tariffs should boost the dollar, but traders are betting that the “United States is creating a self-inflicted wound that would stymie its long-term growth”, CNN says. “They’re ignoring every rule of classic micro and macro economics. This is the policymaking equivalent of a suicide bomber,” market strategist Michael Block told CNN.

Keep going!
A man holding a chart labeled "Reciprocal Tariffs" stands at a podium with a microphone. The chart lists countries and their tariff percentages. An American flag is in the background.
Donald Trump holds up a chart at his ‘Make America Wealthy Again’ global tariff announcement event in the Rose Garden at the White House on April 2, 2025 (Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

VideoApril 3, 2025

Trump’s ‘declaration of economic independence’ spells global chaos

A man holding a chart labeled "Reciprocal Tariffs" stands at a podium with a microphone. The chart lists countries and their tariff percentages. An American flag is in the background.
Donald Trump holds up a chart at his ‘Make America Wealthy Again’ global tariff announcement event in the Rose Garden at the White House on April 2, 2025 (Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The US president’s sweeping programme of global tariffs will hit every country abroad, including New Zealand, and dramatically raise prices at home. 

This is an excerpt from The World Bulletin, our weekly global current affairs newsletter exclusively for Spinoff Members. Sign up here.

In a dramatic, flag-draped address from the White House Rose Garden, Donald Trump today announced what he called a “declaration of economic independence” – a sweeping global tariff programme that will impose new import duties on nearly every trading partner of the United States. “April 2, 2025, will forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn, the day America’s destiny was reclaimed and the day that we began to make America wealthy again,” the president declared.

The centrepiece of the policy is a baseline 10% tariff on all goods from every country except Canada and Mexico, which have already been hit with tariffs of up to 25%. On top of the standard 10%, which is what New Zealand will pay, 60 nations labelled “worst offenders” will be hit with reciprocal tariffs mirroring the duties they place on US goods. Some of the sharpest increases target China (34%, on top of its existing 20% tariff), Vietnam (46%), Cambodia (49%) and the EU (20%). A separate, across-the-board 25% tariff on foreign-made cars will also kick in at midnight. “For years, hard-working American citizens were forced to sit on the sidelines as other nations got rich and powerful, much of it at our expense,” Trump said. “But now it’s our turn to prosper.”

‘Worse than the worst-case scenario’

Wall Street did not share Trump’s sense of triumph. Markets, which had closed higher earlier in the day, plummeted in after-hours trading as the sheer scale of the new tariffs became clear. Dow futures fell by over 250 points, the S&P 500 dropped nearly 1.7%, and the Nasdaq 100 slid a punishing 2.5%. “This is worse than the worst-case scenario of the tariffs that many in the market expected,” said CNBC’s Jon Fortt, stunned by the breadth of the measures. 

Economists were equally alarmed. Justin Wolfers, writing on Bluesky, described the tariffs as monstrously destructive, founded on “fabrications, imagined wrongs, discredited theories and ignorance of decades of evidence”, warning they will ultimately hurt working Americans most. Michael Pearce of Oxford Economics echoed the sentiment, saying the surprise severity of the announcement would force him to revise his US inflation forecast even higher than it is now. While Trump insists the tariffs will revive US manufacturing and reduce the national debt, critics argue they may instead trigger global retaliation, drive up consumer prices and push the US closer to recession.

Bar chart comparing average tariff rates in OECD countries as of 2022. The U.S. rate is 1.4%. A note indicates Trump's 2025 proposal would significantly increase U.S. tariffs beyond the current scale. Data: World Bank.
Source: Justin Wolfers on Bluesky

What it means for New Zealand

Speaking to reporters, trade minister Todd McClay said that while the 10% blanket tariff on exports to the US was a bitter pill to swallow, New Zealand had got off comparatively lightly. According to Thomas Manch in The Post (paywalled), NZ exported about $9bn worth of goods to the US last year; with a 10% tariff that would signal about $900m in costs, which McClay said would likely be worn “by US consumers, not New Zealand exports”. He said the government will be “working very closely with our exporters during the course of today … to get as much information as we can”. 

The minister said he would ask trade officials in Washington to raise an apparently erroneous claim by the US that New Zealand imposes a 20% tariff on US imports – in fact the average tariff is 1.9%. Westpac chief economist Kelly Eckhold told RNZ that the US had likely come to that figure through “a combination of the GST rate plus we do have some tariffs against the US in some products set at a minimum WTO agreed level”. But given that explanation, he said it made no sense that the stated tariff for Australia was 10%. “They also have a GST, and similarly the United Kingdom is assessed at 10 as well and they have a value-added tax.”

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A new world trade order emerges

For global markets, it’s all bad news – but in the long term, perhaps not quite as bad as it seems. Amid the chaos of Trump’s trade war, countries are quietly building a new trade architecture that bypasses the United States altogether, writes the Economist (paywalled). The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP, was once an American-led initiative, but the 12-member pact – which includes New Zealand – now thrives without it. Meanwhile Europe has raced to sign deals with Mercosur, Mexico and others, propelled in part by Trump’s earlier tariff shocks. 

These efforts reflect a declining reliance on the US, whose share of global imports has shrunk from a fifth at the turn of the century to just an eighth today. As services now dominate the US economy, demand for imported goods has plateaued – and that represents an economic opportunity for other countries. “The EU and its open-market allies could form a formidable bloc – coordinating responses to American tariffs and pulling China in a more free-trading direction,” writes the Economist. “Even without China, however, the open-market bloc is big enough to rebuild a trade order from the wreckage of Mr Trump’s war. This may be a dark time for free-traders, but there are glimmers of hope.”