US, Vietnamese businesses ask Trump to delay 46% tariffs on Vietnam [View all]
Source: Reuters
April 6, 2025 3:27 AM EDT Updated 6 hours ago
HANOI, April 6 (Reuters) - U.S. and Vietnamese businesses have asked the Trump administration to delay its planned 46% tariff on Vietnamese goods, saying the levy will hurt them and bilateral commercial relations.
The Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the American Chamber of Commerce in Hanoi expressed concern to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick in a letter dated Saturday, saying the tariff, to take effect on Wednesday, was "shockingly high".
"Lower tariffs for products coming into Vietnam, and for products reaching the American consumer is what will help U.S. companies, the economy, and consumers," AmCham and VCCI said in a statement. "Higher tariffs will not." The Southeast Asian country, a major regional manufacturing base for many Western companies, posted a trade surplus of over $123 billion with the U.S., its largest export destination, last year.
President Donald Trump and Vietnamese leader To Lam agreed on Friday to discuss a deal to remove tariffs, both said after a phone call that Trump called "very productive".
Read more: https://www.reuters.com/markets/us-vietnamese-businesses-ask-trump-delay-46-tariffs-vietnam-2025-04-06/
The U.S. gets a shit-load of shrimp (and lobster tails, and other seafood) from Vietnam, which stresses the shrimpers (including many Vietnamese-American ones) working off the Gulf Coast, notably Louisiana & Alabama, and those who catch lobsters in New England.
Apparently the Gulf state seafood farmers are all for tariffs.
Makes you think of this -

This is not even including quite a bit of clothing, etc., that comes from Vietnam, and many Asian food stores import food products from Vietnam for resale, and restaurants.