May 13, 2026
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Nigeria’s economy seen growing at fastest rate in 5 years – Businessday NG Trump struggles to overcome America’s relentlessly ‘sour mood’ ‘Twenty years of caution’: Banking industry ramps up efforts to fix ‘anaemic’ UK growth 12 New tax terms emerging from Nigeria’s tax reforms, explained simply – Businessday NG Trump official raked over coals for bonkers claim he’s ‘fixing every problem on earth’ Government targets £99bn in Australian investment in major projects CBN drains record naira liquidity as election season shapes up – Businessday NG There’s a bait and switch buried in the Trump Accounts parents need to know about Nigeria’s Ramadan economy fuels 20% rise in dining, travel spending – Businessday NG ‘I voted for you three times’: Critics unload on Trump’s small business summit
The Curious Economist | Trade Win or Tariff Trap? Trump’s UK Deal Raises Questions on Costs and Growth

The Curious Economist | Trade Win or Tariff Trap? Trump’s UK Deal Raises Questions on Costs and Growth

President Trump has called his new trade pact with the UK a “maxed out deal.” But behind the headlines, the fine print reveals something less exciting for economists and trade experts: a 10% baseline tariff that could shape all future US deals—and raise the cost of trade.

While this new agreement replaces some harsher levies and could offer short-term relief for businesses, a 10% tariff is still significantly higher than the 3% average seen before Trump’s second term. And according to the Centre for Economic Policy Research, this baseline tariff will likely stick—not just for the UK, but for all US trade partners.

So what’s the economic concern? First, tariffs are a form of protectionism, where governments place taxes on imports to protect domestic industries. In theory, this should boost domestic production and employment. But in practice, tariffs often raise prices for consumers, increase production costs for firms, and invite retaliatory measures from trading partners. Economists call this a lose-lose situation—where global efficiency falls and everyone is worse off.

What usually happens with tariffs is businesses will pay more for the same goods and pass that cost onto customers. That matters, especially in the US, where consumer spending drives 70% of GDP. Higher prices mean weaker demand, and that puts pressure on business growth, investment, and jobs.

More deals are in the works, including a high-stakes meeting with China, where current tariffs sit at a jaw-dropping 145%. Trump hinted they could come down to 80%—still the highest since World War II.

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