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EconomyTariffs

Exclusive: Trump’s tariff deal ‘quietly’ added 10% raise which nobody is complaining about anymore, says his former commerce secretary 

Eleanor Pringle
By
Eleanor Pringle
Eleanor Pringle
Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets
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Eleanor Pringle
By
Eleanor Pringle
Eleanor Pringle
Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets
Down Arrow Button Icon
June 13, 2025, 6:37 AM ET
U.S. President Donald Trump listens to former Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross speak
U.S. President Donald Trump listens to then Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross speak during his first presidency.Mark Wilson - Getty Images
  • Wilbur Ross, former Commerce Secretary and a key architect of Trump’s first-term trade policy, describes Trump’s current tariff strategy as a deliberate evolution: moving faster, hitting harder, and using broader executive powers to impose tariffs for both economic and diplomatic leverage.

The Trump administration’s use of tariffs has sparked debate over the ultimate goals of its economic strategy. However, a former Cabinet member and key trade advisor to the President has suggested there is an underlying logic to the approach.

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Since winning the Oval Office, President Trump has announced an evolving range of policies. with economic sanctions spinning higher on some trade partners while others have been granted pauses.

Many of the announcements have not come through official White House channels; for example, Trump threatened a 50% tariff on the EU in April in a bid to get European negotiators to the table—by posting on his social media site, Truth Social.

Indeed, Trump has come under scrutiny from Beijing, arguably the most critical region for the U.S. to make a deal, who claim America’s tariff tactics have been “coercion and blackmail” when instead it should “convey information to the Chinese side…through relevant parties.”

But Wilbur Ross, Trump’s Commerce Secretary in his first administration, says there’s a clear tactic at play beneath Trump’s bluster.

The 87-year-old banker turned D.C. power player said there is an “art” to Trump’s dealmaking, as White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has suggested; Ross told Fortune in an exclusive interview: “Well, everybody’s reaction to [tariffs] was first shock and amazement, but the actual retaliatory measures that they put in were fairly modest—even China didn’t match in dollar for dollar.

“There’s a real reason for that, I think the other countries, as they’ve thought about it, have recognized that while they have to talk very bravely for their domestic political constituencies… They also recognize that at the end of the day, they can’t afford a tit-for-tat escalating trade war with us.”

And this was a fact Trump was relying on, continued Ross: “One of the earliest things he put in was that 10% tariff on everything from everywhere. 

“Nobody is even complaining about that anymore. When you think about it, in the normal course, getting quietly to do a 10% tariff on everything from everywhere was a huge achievement, even if he didn’t get anything else. But because he followed it with these much more extreme things, it makes the 10% look like it’s not such a big bother.

“But it’s a huge number, and he’s been collecting it every day.”

Indeed, imported goods alone into the U.S. in 2024 stood at $3.36 trillion—even before tax, duties, and levies were collected (worth $82 billion) and before imported services are added to those figures.

Even 10% of near-$3.4 trillion is an eye-watering sum to add to federal budgets, though some items like autos and steel are even higher. Indeed nations like China, Canada, and Mexico are all already subject to more than the baseline 10% universal tariff.

“A more adventurous path”

When Ross spoke to Fortune in a previous exclusive interview earlier this year, he said President Trump would be all the more confident in his second term because he now better understands the inner workings of Washington, D.C., and has a stronger mandate courtesy of a solid election sweep.

And President Trump’s tactics, which have included everything from threatening a 25% hike on Apple’s iPhones specifically to raising sanctions to more than 150% on China at some points, reflect the path Ross expected.

After all, as Secretary, Ross was one of the key allies in Trump’s team when renegotiating America’s position on the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). At the time, Trump was a fierce critic of the deal with Mexico and Canada and wanted to withdraw from the agreement and begin negotiating from there.

Ross felt the better tactic was to threaten such action and keep an exit as a last resort, an opinion that Trump eventually came around to agreeing with.

Likewise, having been appointed in 2017 Ross oversaw the tariff action in the first Trump administration which included sanctions on Chinese goods as well as aluminum and steel more widely.

“He has started out on a much more adventurous path than last time,” Ross told Fortune this week. “Broader in scope and more extreme in terms of the numbers themselves.”

Trump has three objectives, he adds: shrinking trade deficits, producing revenue to offset his “One Big, Beautiful Bill” and achieving other diplomatic purposes such as the flow of fentanyl into the U.S. and global defense spending.

“He has a much more fulsome, much more complicated agenda than before,” Ross explains. “It’s also different in…that last time I was very careful to set the groundwork to do public hearings, stakeholder meetings, to do written reports, to set a whole record so that under the Administrative Procedures Act we would be relatively safe from people trying to knock it out in court.

“This time, they did a very different thing. They went in mostly just by his say so using the IFA, the Emergency Powers Act, and they ran into a snag at the Court for International Trade.”

This snag may alter the course of tariff reaction on the account of businesses, he added, because their investment timelines may shift based on when the tariffs are legally approved.

But Ross added: “Most people are operating under the assumption that sooner or later, he’ll get something like what he was looking for…and therefore, while it’s slowed down a bit, [I] don’t think it will derail [trade talks] because [foreign governments] also know there are other ways he could punish them rather than just the tariffs. 

“So it’s a bump in the road, but I don’t think it’s a huge pothole that would wreck the car.”

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About the Author
Eleanor Pringle
By Eleanor PringleSenior Reporter, Economics and Markets
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Eleanor Pringle is an award-winning senior reporter at Fortune covering news, the economy, and personal finance. Eleanor previously worked as a business correspondent and news editor in regional news in the U.K. She completed her journalism training with the Press Association after earning a degree from the University of East Anglia.

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