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HomeGlobal NewsThose who have and have no deal

Those who have and have no deal

U.S. President Donald Trump calls on a reporter during a meeting with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. in the Oval Office at the White House on July 22, 2025, in Washington, D.C.

Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Come Friday, the world will have to contend with higher tariff rates from the Trump administration, raising the specter of even more economic uncertainty.

For most countries, that can of worms has been kicked twice down the road, from “Liberation Day” on April 2, to July 9, and now to Aug. 1.

Back in April, Trump had claimed to have done “over 200 deals” in an interview with Time Magazine, and trade advisor Peter Navarro had said that “90 deals in 90 days” was possible. The country has fallen far short of that, with only eight deals in 120 days, including one with the 27-member European Union.

Here are where things stand in global trade.

UK first to a deal

Vietnam: tariffs more than halved

Indonesia: bringing down barriers

Indonesia’s tariff rate was cut to 19% from 32% in its agreement with Trump, announced on July 15.

The White House said Indonesia will eliminate tariff barriers on over 99% of U.S. products exported to Indonesia across all sectors, including agricultural products and energy.

The framework also says the countries will also address various “non-tariff barriers” and other obstacles that the U.S. faces in Indonesian markets.

Philippines: marginal decrease

Japan: rice and autos

EU: some discontent remains

South Korea: also at 15%

China: talks still ongoing

For countries without a deal, it appears that a higher global baseline tariff of about 15%-20% will be slapped on them, according to Trump, higher than the 10% baseline announced on “Liberation Day.”

Countries with a trade surplus with the U.S. will most likely see a higher “reciprocal” tariff rate.

Here are some key trading partners that have not agreed to a deal with the U.S.

India: tariffs and a penalty

Canada: an ‘intense phase’

Mexico: no sign of progress

Australia: sticking to the baseline

Australia currently faces the baseline 10% as it runs a trade deficit with the United States. However, the country could be facing a higher tariff rate if Trump decides to raise his baseline rate to 15%-20%.

Canberra has not been publicly known to be in trade talks with Washington, with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese reportedly arguing that Australia’s deficit with the U.S. and its free trade agreement should mean there should be no tariff on Australian imports.

Most recently, Australia relaxed restrictions on U.S. beef, a move which the office of the U.S. trade representative credited to Trump, but Albanese had reportedly said the move was not prompted by Trump.

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