Trump Says Not Considering Lowering Tariffs on India Imports
(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump says he’s not looking at lowering tariffs on India, one week after the US doubled levies on the country’s imports to 50% as punishment for its Russian oil imports.
Most Read from Bloomberg
One of World’s Most Liveable Cities Ends Euro-a-Day Travel Pass
Sydney’s New Airport Will Take Travelers Into the Wild
Trump Signs Order to ‘Make Federal Architecture Beautiful Again’
Parents Mobilize to Protect School Commutes Amid Trump Deployment in DC
In New Orleans, Katrina Taught a Lesson in Local Resilience
Trump responded “no” when asked by a reporter whether he is considering taking away some of the tariffs imposed on India.
“We get along with India very well,” Trump added Tuesday at a White House event, but criticized what he said was an imbalanced trade relationship with New Delhi because of high Indian levies.
“India has, you have to understand, for many years, it was a one-sided relationship,” he said. “India was charging us tremendous tariffs, about the highest in the world.”
The US tariffs on India came despite months of negotiations between New Delhi and Washington and stunned officials in the Asian nation. India’s high tariffs and protectionist policies have exasperated US trade negotiators.
Trump set a 25% duty on Indian exports but doubled that level to 50% last week as punishment for purchases of Russian oil. Those levies hit more than 55% of goods shipped to the US, which is India’s biggest market.
Trump has expressed frustration over India’s continued purchases of Russian energy, which New Delhi has justified as necessary to keep its oil prices low. Critics say such energy buys by India and China help keep Russia’s economy afloat and undercut sanctions against Moscow aimed at reining in the country’s military machine and bringing an end to the war in Ukraine.
The US president said he was “watching very closely” to see how Russian President Vladimir Putin addressed efforts to set up a meeting with his Ukrainian counterpart and insinuated he was considering additional measures if talks did not progress.
Trump on Monday said that India had offered to cut its tariffs “to nothing” in a social media post, without saying when that offer was made or whether the White House plans to reopen trade talks with India.
“It’s getting late. They should have done so years ago,” Trump said on Monday.
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
How Chatbots and AI Are Already Transforming Kids' Classrooms
Monchhichi Makes a Comeback Amid Labubu Craze
Young European Backpackers Are Being Lured to Australia for Mining Jobs
Nike’s WNBA Stars Are Outshining Their Male Counterparts
How Bombas Built a Fancy Socks Empire With $500 Million in Sales
©2025 Bloomberg L.P.