Tariffs are going to work out well between India-US: Donald Trump

ANI March 29, 2025 222 views

President Trump expressed confidence that tariff negotiations between India and the US will yield positive results. He complimented Prime Minister Modi as a smart leader and valued friend during recent discussions. The US is implementing new 25% tariffs on imported vehicles starting April 2. Both nations continue negotiating reciprocal tariff policies that address longstanding trade imbalances.

"I think it's going to work out very well between India and our country" - Donald Trump
Washington, DC, March 29: Higlighting a positive outlook for the India-US tariff talks, President Donald Trump said 'tariffs are going to work out well between New Delhi and the Washington, DC,' expecting a favorable outcome.

Key Points

1

Trump praises PM Modi as strategic partner in trade talks

2

New 25% US vehicle tariffs take effect April 2

3

Reciprocal tariff policy targets India's high import duties

4

Auto tariffs remain key sticking point in negotiations

While answering questions during an Interaction with reporters at the swearing-in ceremony of the US attorney for New Jersey, Alina Habba, on Friday (local time), Trump praised Prime Minister Narendra Modi, referring to him as a "very smart man" and a "great friend."

Trump said, "Prime Minister Modi was here just recently, and we've always been very good friends."

He added, "India is one of the highest tariffing nations in the world... They're very smart. He (PM Modi) is a very smart man and a great friend of mine. We had very good talks. I think it's going to work out very well between India and our country. And I want to say you have a great prime minister."

This week, Trump made a major policy announcement from the Oval Office by declaring a 25 per cent tariff on all imported vehicles entering the United States, a move he described as "very exciting" for domestic manufacturing.

The tariffs, set to take effect on April 2, will impact nearly half of all vehicles sold in the United States, including American brands assembled overseas. The wide-ranging measure aims to incentivise car manufacturers to establish more production facilities within US borders.

Earlier, on several occasions, Trump had targeted India, saying "they have the highest tariffs" and "it is a hard place to do business."

In February, US President Donald Trump announced that he would soon impose reciprocal tariffs on countries like India and China, asserting that the United States would charge the same tariffs these nations impose on American goods.

Trump said, "We will soon impose reciprocal tariffs- they charge us, we charge them. Whatever a company or a country, such as India or China, charges, we want to be fair; hence, reciprocal."

He added, "We have never done that. We were getting ready to do it until Covid hit."

Trump also specifically targeted India's tariffs on automobile imports, saying, "India charges us auto tariffs higher than 100 per cent."

While addressing a joint session of the US Congress, Trump said that the reciprocal tax will kick in on April 2. He had said that the US has been ripped off for decades by nearly every country on earth and vowed not to "let that happen any longer."

He also discussed the tariffs imposed by the European Union, China, Brazil, and Mexico and announced that the US would impose tariffs on other nations based on their actions toward the US.

Comments:

Raj P.

Interesting to see Trump praising Modi ji like this. Hope it translates to fair deals for both countries 🤞

Sarah L.

As an auto worker in Michigan, I appreciate Trump standing up for US manufacturing jobs. These tariffs should've happened years ago!

Amit K.

100% tariffs on US cars in India seems excessive though. Maybe time for both sides to compromise?

James T.

Trump's trade policies always create drama but often get results. Curious to see how this plays out with India's strong negotiation team.

Priya M.

Wish they'd focus more on tech partnerships than just tariffs. India-US relations have so much more potential beyond trade wars 😕

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