Trump’s latest tariff threats will hurt U.S. just as much as Canada, experts say
HALIFAX — International trade experts say U.S. President Donald Trump’s latest threat to impose 100 per cent tariffs on Canada will hurt his own economy just as much, if not more, than Canada’s.
They say that means Trump may ultimately look for an off-ramp to avoid the economic damage, similar to walking back threats to impose tariffs on eight European countries last week if Denmark didn’t hand ownership of Greenland to the U.S.
“Yes, he’s hurting Canadian businesses, of course, but he’s hurting U.S. consumers more. He has to know this,” Preetika Joshi, an assistant professor at McGill University’s faculty of management, said in an interview Saturday.
Referring to Prime Minister Mark Carney as “governor,” his old insult for former prime minister Justin Trudeau, the president’s Saturday morning social media post said if Carney thinks Canada can become a “drop off port” for China to send products into the U.S., he’s “sorely mistaken.”


