New trade war deadline prolongs instability, UN trade agency says

US President Donald Trump's August 1 tariff deadline sparks global uncertainty as businesses and developing nations face investment and planning paralysis. - REUTERS/Filepic
GENEVA: The Trump administration's decision to extend a negotiating deadline for tariff rates is prolonging uncertainty and instability for countries, the executive director of the United Nations trade agency said on Tuesday.
AI Brief
- Trump warns 14 nations of steep tariff hikes from August 1, escalating the global trade war.
- Trade experts warn that shifting costs prevent long-term planning and stall global investments.
- Tariffs and aid cuts hit poorer countries hard, delaying key economic decisions.
"This move actually extends the period of uncertainty, undermining long-term investment and business contracts, and creating further uncertainty and instability," Pamela Coke-Hamilton, executive director of the International Trade Centre, told reporters in Geneva.
"If a business is not clear on what costs they are going to pay, they cannot plan, they cannot decide on who will invest," Coke-Hamilton said, citing the example of Lesotho, where major textile exporting companies have withheld their investment for the time being, pending a tariff outcome.
The uncertainty, combined with deep cuts in development aid, had created a "dual shock" for developing countries, she added.
Countries have been under pressure to conclude deals with the U.S. after Trump unleashed a global trade war in April that roiled financial markets and sent policymakers scrambling to protect their economies.
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