U.S. Slaps 25% Tariffs on Most Brazilian Goods, With 12.5% More Possible Next Week
Updated
Updated · CNBC · Jul 16
U.S. Slaps 25% Tariffs on Most Brazilian Goods, With 12.5% More Possible Next Week
3 articles · Updated · CNBC · Jul 16
Summary
July 22 is the start date for new U.S. tariffs on most Brazilian imports after Washington ended a yearlong Section 301 probe and said talks with Brasilia had collapsed.
U.S. officials tied the 25% levy to Brazil's alleged unfair practices, including orders to X, Meta and Google to remove political content, weak intellectual-property enforcement and barriers in ethanol.
Beef, orange juice, aircraft and parts, and energy products are exempt, but a separate forced-labor probe could add another 12.5% duty on Brazilian goods as soon as next week.
The move revives a trade fight after the Supreme Court in February struck down Trump's earlier 50% Brazil tariffs, leaving only a 10% global tariff in place.
Brazil's government had not commented immediately, while the dispute is already spilling into October's presidential election, with Lula and Senator Flavio Bolsonaro trading blame.