The Morning: Tariff flip-flops

martes, 13 de mayo de 2025

Plus, Trump in the Middle East, white South Africans and Sean Combs. View in browser | nytimes.com May 13, 2025 Good morning. Trump landed...
Plus, Trump in the Middle East, white South Africans and Sean Combs.
The Morning

May 13, 2025

Good morning. Trump landed in Saudi Arabia, his first stop on a four-day tour of the Gulf. Dozens of white South Africans arrived in the U.S. after being granted refugee status. And Sean Combs's federal trial got underway in Manhattan.

More news is below. But first, we look at Trump's tariff promises.

Donald Trump, in a navy suit and blue tie, speaks at a lectern at the White House.
At the White House.  Eric Lee/The New York Times

Tariff turnabout

Author Headshot

By German Lopez

I write for The Morning.

President Trump made big promises with his China tariffs: China needs us more than we need it. America can outlast China in a trade war. Those advantages will let the administration get big concessions and rebalance global commerce.

Trump's actions, however, suggest the talk was bluster. Yesterday, his administration cut its China tariffs from 145 percent to 30 percent for at least a few months. China will reciprocate by lowering its retaliatory levies from 125 percent to 10 percent. Both sides will keep talking.

A diagram showing tariffs imposed by Trump and by China surging and then falling away, though not back to the initial level.
Sources: White House; China's Ministry of Finance | By The New York Times

But China made no concessions. By now, most of us are familiar with this pattern: Trump makes big claims about what his tariffs can get, only for him to later back down without the other country giving up anything meaningful. It happened with Mexico, Canada and most of Trump's "Liberation Day" levies. Despite his claims, America seems to need other countries' trade as much as they need ours, diminishing Trump's negotiating position. Today's newsletter explains.

Price hikes and shortages

Here's the problem: Trade is mutually beneficial. The buyer gets a good, and the seller makes a profit. The United States runs a trade deficit with China — it buys more than it sells — because Americans have the cash and want what China is selling.

Trump's tariffs on China were so high that they were effectively an embargo that threatened to end all of those mutually beneficial transactions. That would cover a lot of goods — more than 70 percent of smartphones, laptops and toys — as well as manufacturing materials, particularly rare earth metals used in modern electronics. Retailers warned that prices would rise and shelves would go empty. Markets tumbled.

The hits to the economy weakened Trump's negotiating position, and China knew it. Americans spent the last few years fuming about inflation and supply mishaps, and they would be furious if those problems continued. And unlike previous bouts of inflation that leaders could pin on the pandemic or the Ukraine war, this time it would clearly be Trump's fault.

So China took a patient approach. Let prices rise and markets fall, and eventually Trump would have to give in. That strategy worked, at least for now.

What remains

Trump still has time to get some concessions out of China, which does not want to lose its biggest global customer. The concessions could be small. In the past, countries have given Trump minor compromises in response to tariffs — enough for him to save face, essentially — as when Canada vaguely promised to step up border enforcement earlier this year.

In the meantime, tariffs remain much higher than they were before Trump's second term. When Trump ran for president, many economists warned that his promise of 10 percent tariffs on every other country would hurt the economy. Even after all of Trump's backpedaling, a 10 percent universal tariff is still in place. Duties on specific goods, such as cars, are even higher. Prices on clothes, appliances, video game consoles and everything else made in other countries will likely rise as a result.

For more

  • The cut in tariffs on China is, for now, temporary. While some importers could rush to order Chinese goods, others may move more cautiously.
  • Trade experts warned that 90 days may not be enough time to make substantial progress on the U.S. and China's long list of trade disputes.
  • America must reckon with two sides of China's economy, Li Yuan writes: One is a technology superpower, and the other is struggling.

INSIDE THE CONCLAVE

Three cardinals, photographed from behind, are walking and wearing black robes with red caps and sashes.
In Rome, before the conclave.  Murad Sezer/Reuters

The most-clicked link in the newsletter yesterday was the remarkable inside story of how cardinals picked the new pope.

It's always a feat to get skittish officials to confide in reporters. Yet Times journalists persuaded many Vatican leaders (sworn to secrecy on pain of excommunication!) to share how they narrowed three front-runners down to a single obvious choice. I asked Jason Horowitz, our Rome bureau chief, how they reported it out. — Adam B. Kushner

I thought deliberations inside the Sistine Chapel were sacrosanct!

Nobody said, "I voted for X." Nobody told us, "The tally was within 10 votes and then Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost crept up." Nobody gave a level of granular detail that could get them in trouble. But we used a lot of shoe-leather reporting — tracking cardinals down, finding them on the phone, leaning on relationships built over years. Each gave us a small kernel of detail. The combination revealed a picture of what happened.

We learned how Prevost avoided politicking at dinner on the conclave's first night, how he held his head as the final votes were counted. What does the vow of secrecy cover, exactly?

I think it's like how Justice Potter Stewart described obscenity — you know it when you see it. I didn't advise sources to cross an ethical line. One cardinal said it happened on the fourth vote, and maybe that stretches the rules. But it's just that we spoke to so many people that we could piece it together. It was more the collective work than one revelatory interview.

THE LATEST NEWS

Trump in the Middle East

Mohammed bin Salman alongside President Trump at the foot of a purple-carpeted set of airport stairs.
Trump and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Doug Mills/The New York Times
  • Trump landed in Saudi Arabia this morning, his first stop in a four-day tour of the Gulf. He's told advisers that he wants to sign deals worth more than $1 trillion on the trip.
  • The president is expected in Qatar tomorrow. He plans to accept a jumbo jet from the country's royal family, an example of how his second term is blowing through guardrails around public service, Charlie Savage writes.

Government Overhaul

  • The Energy Department is set to repeal efficiency rules for household appliances. That's likely to increase consumers' energy costs, experts say.
  • The Agriculture Department will restore climate change information that it had removed from its website, after farmers and environmental groups sued.
  • Trump named Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general, as acting librarian of Congress. But staff members refused access to two of his team, saying Congress must have input on the appointment.

More on the Trump Administration

International

Edan Alexander, the last living American hostage Hamas held in Gaza, is sitting between his parents and smiling after they were reunited.
Edan Alexander with his parents.  Israeli Government, via Reuters

Other Big Stories

A highway with brush and road barriers on either side
Near Santa Fe. Ramsay de Give for The New York Times
  • Many people released from the Santa Fe jail must walk along a dangerous highway to get back to town. Five have died in the past decade.
  • Gavin Newsom, California's governor, asked hundreds of cities and towns to ban homeless encampments.
  • Cities in Illinois are using crime-free housing programs to oust families for minor infractions, an investigation by The Times and The Illinois Answers Project found.

BOY PROBLEMS

Young men are struggling, and we wanted to figure out just how badly and why.

Boys enter kindergarten lagging behind girls in both academic readiness and behavior. A majority of teenagers agree that boys are more disruptive. Large shares say girls get better grades, have more leadership roles and speak up more in class.

A bar chart shows the results of a survey of teenagers: 64 percent say boys are more disruptive in school, 27 percent view girls as more like leaders, and 78 percent believe teachers have no gender preference for favorites.
Note: Survey conducted Sept. 18-Oct. 10. Home-schooled teens were not included. Shares of respondents who did not offer an answer are not shown. Source: Pew Research Center The New York Times

In interviews, young men say that school never felt like a good fit for them, or that they got the sense that teachers didn't like boys, and that this left them feeling discouraged or undervalued. By high school, girls are more likely to graduate on time — and more likely to go to college.

A line graph showing college attendance rates from 1960 to 2022. Women's attendance increased from below men's to 66 percent in 2020, while men's attendance was at 57%.
Note: Individuals ages 16-24 are counted here if enrolled in a two- or four-year college by October in the year of their high school graduation or equivalent. Source: National Center for Education Statistics The New York Times

Young men are struggling in their mental health and transitions to adulthood, too. What's going on here? I'm reporting a series on boys, the first installment of which published today. I'd love to hear your experiences and insights about what's going on with boys, and what might be driving it. Tell The Times what you think here. — Claire Cain Miller

OPINIONS

Trump's attempt to defund a lecture on freedom in Denmark by Joseph Stiglitz, a Columbia professor, shows that no program is safe, the professor writes.

Here's a column by Michelle Goldberg on Trump's second nominee for surgeon general.

More ways to share, more ways to connect.

Find an article you want to share? You can easily post it to your Instagram story or share it as a free-to-read gift article. Learn more.

MORNING READS

A series of images from space.
Don Pettit/NASA

Rivers, wildfires, lightning: A NASA astronaut recently spent 220 days at the International Space Station, where he captured the wonders visible from space. See his photos.

TikTok stars: Oliver Widger quit his job, cashed in his 401(k) and bought a boat. Now he and his cat, Phoenix, are sailing around the world.

Trending online yesterday: The rapper Tory Lanez was stabbed 14 times in a California prison. Lanez is serving a 10-year sentence for shooting Megan Thee Stallion.

Lives Lived: Robert Shapiro was a law professor who became a brash corporate executive. He performed a marketing miracle by branding aspartame as the sugar substitute NutraSweet. Shapiro died at 86.

SPORTS

N.B.A. Draft: The Mavericks won the league lottery and could draft Cooper Flagg.

N.B.A.: The Knicks and Timberwolves are up 3-1 after wins over the Celtics and Warriors.

N.H.L.: Edmonton and Carolina are both one win away from the conference finals.

ARTS AND IDEAS

Many people are packed together as yellowish crisscrossing lights create an arch above them.
Untz untz untz.  David Billet for The New York Times

Electronic dance music is back. Festival lineups are filled with D.J.s, while the biggest names in pop — including Beyoncé and Charli XCX — have made albums inspired by dance. No one style of the genre has surged in popularity over the others: hard techno, drum and bass, Afro house and U.K. garage are all finding audiences. Read more about the renaissance — and the forces fueling it.

Related: Want to get in on the scene? See where to club, which artists to follow and what songs to hear.

More on culture

  • "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives" returns to Hulu this week.
  • The Cannes Film Festival, in response to a sheer dress trend, has banned nudity on its red carpet, The A.P. reports.
  • The football coach Bill Belichick, 73, cheered on Jordon Hudson, his 24-year-old girlfriend, at a beauty pageant in Maine.
  • Sean Combs's federal trial began. Prosecutors accused the mogul of a pattern of sexual coercion and of using his inner circle to facilitate abuse.
  • Jon Stewart joked about Qatar giving Trump a plane: "He's like the reverse Oprah: 'I get a jet! And that's it.'"

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.

Make Ina Garten's perfect roast chicken. She calls it "the world's easiest dinner."

Experience more joy. Here are three tips.

Clean your suede jacket.

GAMES

Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was unboxing.

And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections, Sports Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

Correction: Saturday's newsletter misstated the streaming service that airs "Poker Face." It is Peacock, not Netflix.

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.

The Morning Newsletter Logo

Editor: Adam B. Kushner

News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti

Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson

News Staff: Desiree Ibekwe, Brent Lewis, German Lopez, Ashley Wu

News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar

Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch

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