Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Introduction

In 2025,U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposed tariff hikes—including a staggering increase from 34% to 145% on Chinese imports and a flat 10% tariff on key trade partners such as the European Union (18.5% of U.S. imports), Japan (4.5%), Vietnam (4.2%), and India (2.7%)—have reignited fears of a global trade war. These tariffs affect over 60% of U.S. imports, threatening to reduce global trade growth by up to 1.5 percentage points and wipe out US$300–500 billion in trade value in 2025.

While the intention is to protect American industries, the ripple effects are expected to disrupt global supply chains, increase inflation in the U.S., and reduce market access for exporters across developing countries. Africa, with average import tariffs around 8%, may experience a 1–2% decline in export revenue, particularly in agriculture and textiles. In East Africa, countries like Kenya, Ethiopia, and Tanzania, which rely on apparel and commodity exports, face uncertain prospects as U.S. demand contracts and global trade flows reorient. For Tanzania, while direct U.S. exposure is limited, the indirect effects—such as reduced demand for coffee, tobacco, and minerals—may lead to a 0.3–0.5% drop in GDP growth and 1–2% export revenue loss.

March 2025 Global Trade Update from UNCTAD, with analysis at the global, Africa-wide, East Africa, and Tanzania levels, including relevant figures.

🌍 Global

Trade Growth & Trends (2024–2025)

Tariff Trends

Key Issues

🌍 Africa

Tariff Trends

Trade Growth

Challenges

🌍 East Africa

East Africa isn't isolated in most figures but falls under Africa or Rest of Asia depending on the context. However, based on patterns:

Trade Position

Key Challenges

Tanzania-Specific Insights

Tanzania isn’t specifically mentioned in the report, but here are contextual implications:

Tariffs & Trade Policy

Impacts

Strategic Focus Areas

📊 Key Figures Table

IndicatorGlobalAfricaEast Africa (Est.)Tanzania (Est.)
2024 Trade Value (US$)$33 trillionN/AN/AN/A
Import Tariffs (avg.)~2% (dev’d)~8%~8%~8%
Export Tariffs Faced~1.9%~3.9%~3.5–4%~4%
Tariff on Agriculture (MFN avg.)~20%HighHighHigh
Tariff Peaks (15%+) in Food/Apparel8% of tradeCommonCommonLikely similar
Intra-Regional Tariff Preference Margin4.6% (Africa)4.6%~4–5%4–5% (EAC)

United States' trade dynamics with other countries in the March 2025 UNCTAD Global Trade Update, including figures:

United States Trade Overview (2024–Q4 2024)

📦 Goods Trade

📈 Services Trade

⚖️ Trade Balance (Goods)

🔁 Major U.S. Bilateral Trade Relationships (Goods, 2024)

Trade PartnerTrade Balance (US$ Billion)Change in Q4
China-355 (deficit)-14
European Union-241 (deficit)-12
Mexico-178 (deficit)-6
Viet Nam-110 (deficit)-5
Canada-83 (deficit)+5
Japan-56 (deficit)+2
India-37 (deficit)0

These deficits reflect the U.S. importing more than exporting across these countries, especially in electronics, machinery, apparel, and consumer goods.

🔄 Trade Dependence Patterns (2024 Trends)

👉 This shift reflects supply chain diversification (friendshoring/nearshoring), aiming to reduce reliance on China while increasing ties with ASEAN countries.

📉 Trade Risks for the U.S. (2025 Outlook)

📊 Sector-Specific Trade Involvement

U.S. trade deficits are high in:

Exports are strong in:

The proposed tariff hikes by Donald Trump—especially the massive increase on Chinese imports and widespread 10% blanket tariffs—would have major global economic consequences. What these tariffs mean, and how they could impact the global economy, trade flows, and developing countries:

📊 Tariff Hike Summary (as proposed)

CountryShare of U.S. ImportsPrevious RateUpdated Rate% Change in Tariff Burden
China13.4%34%145%+111 percentage points
EU18.5%20%10%-10pp (may lower?)
Japan4.5%24%10%-14pp
Vietnam4.2%46%10%-36pp
South Korea4%25%10%-15pp
Taiwan3.6%32%10%-22pp
India2.7%26%10%-16pp
UK2.1%10%10%No change
Switzerland1.9%31%10%-21pp
Thailand1.9%36%10%-26pp
Malaysia1.6%24%10%-14pp
Brazil1.3%10%10%No change

Global Economic Effects of These Tariff Changes

1. 🧨 China: Shockwaves from 145% Tariff

2. 🔄 Redirection of Trade (Global Supply Chains)

3. 💰 Consumer Inflation in the U.S.

4. 📉 Global Trade Contraction

5. 🌍 Developing Countries at Risk

6. 💼 Business Uncertainty & Investment Drops

Estimated Sectoral Impacts

SectorExpected Impact of Tariffs
ElectronicsSevere disruption; China, Taiwan, Korea hit
ApparelVietnam, India, Bangladesh lose cost edge
AutomotiveEU, Japan, South Korea exports face more hurdles
AgricultureIf retaliation hits, U.S. farmers may lose markets
Machinery/ToolsPrices rise, sourcing shifts away from Asia

Conclusion: Likely Global Effects

MetricEffect (2025 if implemented)
Global Trade Growth↓ 1–1.5 percentage points
U.S. Consumer Prices↑ short-term inflation
China’s Export Surplus↓ significantly
Global Supply Chain Stability↓ major disruptions
Investment & FDI Flows↓ reduced investor confidence
Developing Country Exports↓ unless they shift to non-U.S. markets

Likely effects of Trump’s proposed tariff increases—particularly the massive 145% on China and 10% flat tariffs on key U.S. trade partners—broken down by:

🌍 GLOBAL LEVEL IMPACT

🔺 Key Figures

🔁 Trade Impact

🌍 AFRICA LEVEL IMPACT

📦 Africa–U.S. Trade Context

🔺 Effects on Africa

Impact AreaExpected Outcome
Global trade slowdown↓ African export demand (esp. commodities)
Tariff escalation on Asia↑ Temporary opportunity for African exports
Global value chain shifts↑ Opportunity to plug into new niches, but limited by infrastructure
Inflation in U.S.↓ Purchasing power, ↓ demand for African goods

🧾 Estimated Figures

🌍 EAST AFRICA LEVEL IMPACT

📦 East Africa–U.S. Trade Context

🔺 Effects on East Africa

AreaExpected Impact
Textile/apparel exportsCould gain from China's loss, but East Asia still dominates
Agricultural exportsRemain vulnerable if U.S. demand falls
Logistics and shippingMay suffer from weaker global trade flows
AGOA ProgramStill allows some duty-free access to U.S.

🧾 Estimated Figures

TANZANIA LEVEL IMPACT

📦 Tanzania–U.S. Trade Snapshot

🔺 Effects on Tanzania

ChannelImpact
Export opportunitiesLimited short-term benefit if AGOA remains
U.S. imports (machinery)↑ Cost of imported machinery, industrial tools
Export of value-added goodsStill limited by low capacity, tariffs won’t change much
Global price shocks↓ Commodity prices due to lower global demand

🧾 Estimated Figures

SUMMARY TABLE

RegionKey ExposureProjected Trade ImpactGDP Effect
GlobalValue chains, consumer inflation↓ $300–500B in trade↓ 0.5–1.5%
AfricaCommodity & textile exports, U.S. demand↓ up to 2% exports↓ 0.5–1%
East AfricaCoffee, apparel exports (AGOA reliance)Mixed (↓ demand, ↑ market share)↓ 0.5–1%
TanzaniaAgriculture, minerals, imported machinery↓ 1–2% export revenue↓ 0.3–0.5%
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