Treasurer Jim Chalmers has released analysis predicting the impact of Trump’s tariffs on the Australian economy to be “modest.”
Australia will be subject to a 10 percent tariff on all imports, while steel, aluminum and automotive products will receive a 25 percent tariff.
The analysis comes as Australian markets took a hit on April 7, with the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index sliding more than 4 percent. However, in earlier trade the ASX 200 slid 6 percent before bouncing back. The Australian dollar has also dropped to 60 US cents
“The effects on the Australian economy are expected to be modest, however, some parts of the agriculture, energy, mining and durable manufacturing sectors will be more adversely affected than others,” the analysis sent to The Epoch Times states.
The modelling notes that Australia’s macroeconomic policy settings including flexible exchange rate and credible inflation targeting framework would help mitigate the impacts on the economy.
“However, this modelling does not fully capture the negative impact of trade hostilities. It does not capture the impact of uncertainty, volatility in financial and economic markets, or the potential for additional trade disruptions,” Treasury added.

While Australia has been hit with the baseline tariff, multiple nations including China, Europe, Taiwan and Switzerland faced much higher import duties.
China will be subject to a 34 percent reciprocal tariff on top of its current 20 percent tariff, taking its total hit to 54 percent.
The Australian Treasury analysis predicted the tariff changes would have a “significant impact” on the global economy.
“United States GDP is expected to decline significantly as a result of the tariff policy changes, primarily as a result of imported goods becoming more expensive,” Treasury said.
“By 2027, the level of real US GDP is estimated to be around 0.8 percent lower relative to a baseline scenario with no tariffs, while inflation is estimated to increase by around 1.4 percentage points.”
“Oil prices went down 15 percent in two days, which impacts working Americans more than the stock market does. Interest rates hit their low for the year, so I’m expecting mortgage rates to pick up.”
Meanwhile, the Australian Treasury said the impacts on gross domestic product in China and other nations with high tariffs would also be “significant”
“Retaliatory actions further amplifies the impacts. GDP in China is estimated to be around 0.6 percent lower relative to a no tariff scenario, almost entirely reflecting the U.S. tariff changes,” the analysis noted.
However, Treasury reiterated the impact on the Australian economy was expected to be “more modest.”
Treasury Predicts 0.1 Percent Decline in GDP, 0.2 Percent Inflation Bump
Treasury impacted that Australia’s real GDP would decline by 0.1 percent and inflation rise by 0.2 percent in 2025 compared to a situation with no tariffs.“Over the medium- while the effect on inflation is temporary However, the impacts will be unevenly distributed, with trade-exposed industries including agriculture, energy, mining and durable manufacturing most affected.”
Speaking to reporters in Sydney on July 7, Treasurer Jim Chalmers highlighted the recent market volatility was being driven by the global fallout from the tariff decision.
“We are seeing very substantial volatility now in global stock markets and in our own markets as well. Today in Australia the market lost about 4 percent of value on Friday, the U.S. about 6 percent,” Chalmers said.
Paterson Claims 10 Percent Tariffs a ‘Significant Blow’ to Exporters
Meanwhile, Coalition campaign spokesman James Paterson accused the Prime Minister Anthony Albanese of desperately trying to “play down the seriousness of these tariffs” on Australian exporters.Paterson said, “I don’t agree and I don’t think exporters would agree either.”