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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Welsh business fears over new 10% tariff on exports into the key US market

Chamber Wales has warned that Tariffs will cause untold damage to small businesses trying to trade their way into profit while the domestic economy remains flat.

President Donald Trump speaking as he announced the tariffs(Image: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Businesses in Wales has raised serious concerns over future trading prospects after the imposition a 10% tariff on all º£½ÇÊÓÆµ goods into America.

The US, outside of the EU, is the biggest export market for Welsh firms with total exported goods worth more than £2bn annually.

The 10% tariff on goods is lower than many other countries and the 20% applied to the EU. Separately the US has also implemented a 25% tariff on all automotive and steel and aluminium it imports from nations globally. To what extend Welsh exporters will be able to pass through the cost of tariffs in higher prices to US consumers, is unclear. There are also concerns that nations with higher tariffs will seek to redirect goods into other markets, such as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ with an negative impact on the domestic sales of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ firms.

The value of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ goods exported to the US is more than £62bn a year (2023 figures), which equates to around 16% of total global exports. The biggest contributor are medicinal and pharma products at £8.5bn, followed by vehicles (£8.5bn), oil (£2.9bn), scientific instruments (£2.8bn), organic chemicals (£2.7bn), industrial machinery (£2.5bn), industrial machinery (£2.5bn), transport equipment (£2.4bn) and specialised machinery £1.9bn).

According to Welsh Government analysis, the US is Wales’s highest value trading partner by country. In 2023 Welsh exports to the US were £2.9bn, with the value of US goods imported higher at £3.7bn. The biggest contributor was machinery and transport equipment, which accounted for 5.3% of Wales’s exports. Its biggest import was mineral fuels, lubricants and other materials, which accounted for 8.1% of Wales’s imports.

Some 40,000 people in the Wales work for US firms. Last week US tech firm Vishay Intertechnology announced a £250m investment at its Newport compound semiconductor facility as part of a planned £1bn phased investment over the few years which would create hundreds of high-skilled jobs,

David Peña, director of International Trade at Chambers Wales South East, South West and Mid, said: “Tariffs and other trade barriers have historically shown their inefficacy when it comes to fostering long-term economic growth and competitiveness of products and businesses.

“Increased levels of uncertainty paired with slow economic growth paint a grim picture for Welsh businesses, all while inflationary pressures are still present. The effect of increased global tariffs will be impacting all sectors: from exporters seeing their products becoming less competitive overseas, to importers seeing their supply chains impacted, to final consumers on all receiving ends.