TradingKey – Amid the repeated market shocks caused by U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff policies, observers are beginning to recognize that these tariffs may not be mere negotiation tactics, as widely assumed, but an end in themselves.
Since taking office, Trump has aggressively pursued his tariff agenda, imposing duties on China, Canada, Mexico, and other nations, with plans to enact reciprocal tariffs by April 2.
Trump has repeatedly called tariffs a "panacea"—a universal tool to revive U.S. manufacturing, create jobs, and rebalance trade. While economists initially dismissed the tariffs as leverage to extract favorable trade deals, The New York Times reported on March 17 that Trump’s latest tariff moves appear to be the ultimate goal, leaving little room for compromise.
The report highlights that the shock of Trump’s second-term lies in his deep-rooted belief in a decades-old narrative that foreign countries are ripping America off. When he says tariff is the most beautiful word in the dictionary, he means it.
Hopes for exemptions for specific industries or countries have faded, with recent reports confirming Trump’s refusal to exclude any nation from steel and aluminum tariffs.
Notably, unlike his first term—marked by internal dissent over tariffs—Trump’s current team shows little public resistance to his protectionist agenda.