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Understanding Trump’s tariff policy — and what it means for Nigeria - Voice of Nigeria Forum

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Understanding Trump’s tariff policy — and what it means for Nigeria

Profile Picture by BishopNuel at 10:37 pm on April 14, 2025
In a 1988 interview on The Oprah Winfrey Show, Donald Trump, then a 42-year-old real estate mogul with no formal political role, shared a vision that has shaped his presidency decades later.

“I’d make our allies pay their fair share,” Trump said, accusing countries like Japan and Kuwait of taking advantage of the United States.

“We are a debtor nation… and yet we let Japan come in and dump everything right into our markets. It’s not free trade.”

He also criticised Kuwait, claiming its wealthy citizens benefited from U.S. military protection without giving anything back.

Now, as the 47th President of the United States, Trump is turning those old talking points into policy.

What has Trump done now?
On April 2, 2025, Trump announced a sweeping new tariff regime aimed at reshaping the global trade landscape. A 10% baseline tax has been imposed on most imports, with significantly higher tariffs on countries running large trade surpluses with the US — like China.

Chinese goods now face tariffs of up to 145%. China retaliated with 125% tariffs on US exports.

Trump said the aim is to make imported goods more expensive so Americans will buy more American-made products, revive local industries, and protect US jobs.

He’s also using the tariffs as a form of economic leverage — pressuring other countries on trade, migration, and national security.

What are tariffs?
A tariff is a tax slapped on goods imported from other countries. It’s essentially a fee foreign companies pay to sell their products in another country.

Governments use tariffs to raise revenue, protect local industries, or pressure other countries into changing their behaviour.

How do Tariffs Work?
Imagine a ₦100,000 shipment of cement from Dangote heading to Ghana. If Ghana imposes a 25% tariff, the importer there pays an extra ₦25,000 to the Ghanaian government, on top of the cement’s cost.

That extra charge either makes prices go up for local buyers in Ghana, or reduces the Nigerian company’s profit—possibly even making them consider exporting to another country instead.

Tariffs like this can vary: Ghana might charge just 10% on imports from big partners like South Africa, but up to 50% on products from smaller economies like Liberia — depending not just on retaliation, but on trade imbalances and economic priorities.

Trump says it’s to make foreign goods pricier so Americans buy US-made stuff instead, bringing factories and jobs back home. He’s also using tariffs as leverage — think pressuring Mexico and Canada to crack down on drugs and migration, or nudging China on trade practices.

How do Trump’s tariffs affect Nigeria?
Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, relies heavily on crude oil for its export revenue — 90% of its foreign exchange comes from oil.

The newly announced U.S. tariff policy spares oil and gas exports. But it hits non-oil and agricultural products, valued at over ₦323.96bn, with a 14% tariff.

According to 2024 data from the National Bureau of Statistics, Nigeria earned approximately ₦4.49tn from oil and energy exports to the US last year — most of which is not affected.


https://punchng.com/explainer-understanding-trumps-tariff-policy-and-what-it-means-for-nigeria/
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