President Donald Trump speaks at a dinner for Republican Senators on the White Home in Washington, DC, on July 18, 2025.
Photograph by Allison Robbert/For The Washington Put up through Getty Photographs
The U.S. has signaled it is not going to let up on its Aug. 1 deadline for increased tariffs on the European Union because the bloc fights to strike a deal in time.
Over the weekend, U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick stated he was assured {that a} commerce deal may very well be struck with the European Union, however warned that the deadline for a baseline 30% tariff is fastened.
“That is a tough deadline, so on Aug. 1, the brand new tariff charges will are available,” Lutnick stated Sunday on CBS Information when requested concerning the deadline for his EU tariffs.
He did sign that talks might proceed after this date, nevertheless, noting: “These are the 2 greatest buying and selling companions on this planet, speaking to one another. We’ll get a deal finished. I’m assured we’ll get a deal finished.”
“Nothing stops international locations from speaking to us after Aug. 1, however they’ll begin paying the tariffs on Aug. 1,” he added.
The EU has stated it’s making ready retaliatory measures towards the U.S. if punitive commerce tariffs are imposed. Lutnick dismissed the opportunity of the EU focusing on objects like Boeing airplanes and Kentucky bourbon, nevertheless, saying, “they’re simply not going to try this.”
Final-ditch talks to achieve a commerce settlement are ongoing, with the EU hoping it could possibly negotiate a decrease tariff fee. The bloc had hoped it might strike an identical pact to the U.Okay., which was the primary nation to make a commerce settlement with the U.S. That deal features a 10% baseline tariff with some caveats regarding automobile, metal and aerospace imports.
However economists and analysts have change into more and more skeptical about Brussels’ potential to agree on an identical framework.
For one, the EU has a a lot trickier relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump than the U.Okay. does. Trump has steadily bemoaned what he sees as an imbalanced commerce relationship and unfair buying and selling practices, which the EU denies.
In line with the European Council, complete commerce between the EU and U.S. amounted to 1.68 trillion euros ($1.96 trillion) in 2024. Whereas the EU ran a commerce surplus in items, it recorded a deficit in providers with the U.S. General, the bloc had a surplus of round 50 billion euros final yr, when each items and providers are taken under consideration.
Final Friday, the Monetary Occasions reported that Trump was pushing for a minimal tariff of 15% to twenty% on EU imports in any cope with the bloc. The president was additionally reportedly completely satisfied to maintain duties on the auto sector at 25%, a transfer that may harm automobile exporters in Germany notably laborious.
Chatting with CNBC’s “Europe Early Version” on Monday, Arnaud Girod, head of economics and cross-asset technique at Kepler Cheuvreux, stated a fee of 15% to twenty% “can be a complete automobile crash for European exports.”
“On high of that, you add the euro energy that we have had … so that may begin to price and to be very painful for European exports, and, in fact, would additionally doubtlessly, you understand, reignite some fears on the inflation entrance within the U.S.,” he added.
Temper change in Europe
The White Home’s seemingly harsher stance towards Brussels has prompted policymakers to contemplate how they may reply to a 30% tariff, which might be a steep hike from the present 10% obligation that got here into impact in April.
One EU official advised CNBC that there was a transparent shift in temper relating to the bloc’s potential response amongst all EU member states, besides Hungary, whose chief, Viktor Orban, is a Trump ally.
The bloc’s potential countermeasures towards the U.S. embody levies on imports from the U.S. value 21 billion euros, that are presently on pause till Aug. 6. The European Fee has additionally ready a second spherical of potential tariffs focusing on commerce value 72 billion euros.
Imports starting from clothes to agricultural merchandise and food and drinks objects may very well be affected.
In the meantime, The Wall Avenue Journal and Bloomberg reported that an rising variety of EU member states have signaled their help for the bloc deploying its anti-coercion instrument. That is the EU’s strongest commerce instrument, which might give the European Fee broad powers to take retaliatory motion towards the U.S.
Kepler Cheuvreux’s Girod welcomed the motion round tariff coverage within the EU, saying that the bloc was “lastly” flexing its muscle tissues and that this was wanted to achieve an settlement.
“They have been very, very, I might say, cool, with the U.S. thus far, and now that we’re approaching the deadline, they must sound a bit extra aggressive,” Girod stated. “Not getting a greater deal than the U.Okay. is … a difficulty for the EU, and so they must show that the entire construction of the EU is useful.”
— CNBC’s Silvia Amaro and Matthew Ward-Perkins contributed to this report.