Trump tariffs hit dozens of countries: Which are the most and least affected? Check if India makes it to either list

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 Which are the most and least affected? Check if India makes it to either list

Trump reveals revised tariffs (AI image)

The US has announced a sweeping revision of global tariff rates targeting several countries and the European Union, citing national security and trade imbalance concerns. The move, formalised through an Executive Order signed by President Donald Trump, will see tariffs ranging from 10 per cent to over 41 per cent, with differential rates based on geopolitical risk, economic alignment, and trade volume. While countries like Laos, Syria, and Myanmar will face steep new levies of 40 per cent and above, others like the United Kingdom and Brazil have been relatively spared, facing tariffs as low as 10 per cent. The revised rates will take effect August 7, with no grace period for delayed implementation.Hardest-hit countries: Steepest tariffs slapped These countries face the highest tariff hikes under the new order, either due to perceived geopolitical risks, trade imbalances, or links to sanctioned economies like Russia:

RankCountryTariff Rate
1Syria41%
2Laos40%
3Myanmar (Burma)40%
4Switzerland39%
5Iraq35%
6Serbia35%
7Libya30%
8Algeria30%
9Bosnia & Herzegovina30%
10South Africa30%

Switzerland and Serbia have been placed on the high-tariff list due to financial opacity and trade circumvention concerns.

Iraq and Libya face penalties tied to instability and energy trade patterns.Least impacted countries: Lower duties imposed These countries have either successfully negotiated lower tariffs or are deemed less strategically problematic by Washington:

Country/TerritoryTariff Rate
Brazil10%
Falkland Islands10%
United Kingdom10%
European Union15% or 0% (0% if existing US tariff >15%)
Afghanistan15%
Angola15%
Bolivia15%
Botswana15%
Cameroon15%
Chad15%
Costa Rica15%
Côte d'Ivoire15%
Democratic Republic of Congo15%
Ecuador15%
Equatorial Guinea15%
Fiji15%
Ghana15%
Guyana15%
Iceland15%
Israel15%
Japan15%
Jordan15%
Lesotho15%
Liechtenstein15%
Madagascar15%
Malawi15%
Mauritius15%
Mozambique15%
Namibia15%
Nauru15%
New Zealand15%
Nigeria15%
North Macedonia15%
Norway15%
Papua New Guinea15%
South Korea15%
Trinidad and Tobago15%
Turkey15%
Uganda15%
Vanuatu15%
Venezuela15%
Zambia15%
Zimbabwe15%

The UK and Brazil are among the few large economies to receive a 10 per cent tariff, seen as a signal of ongoing diplomatic engagement. Smaller nations with minimal trade volumes or compliant trade practices have been kept at baseline rates of 15 per cent.

Additionally, countries not mentioned in the Thursday’s executive order will be still be subjected to a standard 10 per cent baseline tariff.

India in the middle

India has been placed in the 25 per cent tariff bracket, placing it among the high-tariffed nations under the revised US tariff regime — though not among the highest, which go up to to 41 per cent. The 25% tariff move on India was partly attributed to India's continued oil trade with Russia and long-standing concerns in Washington over trade imbalances, claimed by Trump. While not the steepest hike, the rate marks a clear escalation compared to the 10-15 per cent baseline applied to several other countries.

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