President Donald Trump said Wednesday that the United States has struck a trade deal with Vietnam that includes a 20% tariff on the Southeast Asian country's imports to the U.S, reports CNBC.
"The deal will give the U.S. tariff-free access to Vietnam's markets", Trump said it Truth Social.
Vietnam also agreed that goods would be hit with a 40% tariff rate if they originated in another country and were transferred to Vietnam for final shipment to the United States.
The process, known as transshipping, that is used to circumvent trade barriers. China, a top exporter to the U.S., has reportedly used Vietnam as a transshipment hub.
Trump wrote that "Vietnam will pay" that 20% duty, but tariffs are taxes on foreign goods that are paid by the importers of those products.
The agreement was announced just days before a 90-day pause on many of Trump's "reciprocal tariffs" was about to end, which would have caused U.S. import taxes on goods from dozens of countries to rise sharply.
Under that protectionist trade plan, Vietnamese imports to the U.S. were subject to a 46% blanket tariff. That rate was lowered to 10% during the 90-day interim. Raising the tariff on Vietnamese goods to 20% will hike costs for U.S. importers, which could be passed on to consumers or suppliers.
The S&P 500 nevertheless rose slightly on news of the trade deal.
Trump's post didn't make it clear when the deal would start or whether both sides had officially signed it. CNBC tried to verify the tariff rates with White House officials, who said more details would be shared later but didn't confirm the figures mentioned by the president.
Trump has signalled that he may ignore or revise the upcoming deadline for his reciprocal tariffs to snap back higher. The 90-day pause, which lowered tariffs on nearly all other countries to a blanket 10% rate, was imposed in early April to give countries breathing room while they negotiate deals with the U.S.
As the deadline approached, the Trump administration has only implemented revised trade frameworks with China and the UK, although it has repeatedly said the US is close to agreements with many other countries.
Vietnam, whose exports to the U.S. reportedly comprised 30% of its gross domestic product last year, is especially vulnerable to Trump's tariffs.
Critics of Trump's unpredictable tariff policies warn that the duties create economic uncertainty and will result in higher prices for U.S. consumers. The Trump administration and its defenders counter that tariffs do not cause inflation and note that the president's duties have brought in billions of dollars to the U.S. government.
A pricing model created for CNBC this month by retail consulting group AlixPartners found that a 10% U.S. tariff on Vietnamese goods would cause the price of an imported men's sweater to rise by about 8%. Under the 46% tariff Trump initially slapped on Vietnam, the price of that same sweater would rise roughly 35%, the group found.
U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday that officials expect that the impacts of Trump's tariffs will start to show up more during the summer months.
Prices on certain items, including apparel and footwear, are already ticking higher as a result of the tariffs, CNBC has reported.
Some analysts believe the lack of a widespread impact on U.S. prices so far is the result of pre-tariff stockpiling by companies, as well as the time it takes for those tariffs to show up in the economy.
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