• US Imposes Unilateral Tariffs on South Africa: Effective from August 8, 2025, the US introduced a 30% tariff on foreign imports, including those from South Africa, which the South African government considers unfair and damaging despite the country’s small share of US imports.
  • South Africa Responds with a Comprehensive Economic Package: In reaction to the tariffs, South Africa launched various initiatives such as an Export Support Desk, Localisation Fund, and Competitiveness Support Programme to support affected industries and preserve jobs.
  • Trade Negotiations and Efforts to Address Imbalance: South Africa submitted a Framework Deal to the US in May aimed at balancing trade, promoting digital trade, and encouraging investments, though these efforts were overlooked in the tariff decision.

South Africa Unveils Trade Response Plan After Sudden 30% US Tariff

The South African government has responded firmly to the United States’ imposition of a 30% unilateral tariff on foreign imports, including those from South Africa, effective 8 August 2025. Despite efforts to strengthen bilateral trade, the move by the US has been labelled “unfortunate” and unfair, especially given South Africa’s small 0.25% share of total US imports.

In response, the government has launched a comprehensive Economic Response Package, including, an Export Support Desk to help affected businesses find new markets, a Localisation Fund and Competitiveness Support Programme to protect jobs and industry, a Block Exemption for Exporters, allowing collaboration to stay competitive, and Labour support to mitigate job losses.

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South Africa’s Framework Deal submitted to the US in May sought to address trade imbalances, promote digital trade, and encourage investment. However, these efforts were overlooked.

The new tariffs could reduce SA’s growth by 0.2%, although 35% of exports remain exempt, including pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and energy products.

Government says it will continue negotiations with the US, while aggressively diversifying export markets across Africa, Asia, the EU, and the Middle East. Deals with the EU, China, Thailand, Japan, and ASEAN nations are in progress to unlock new trade opportunities.

South Africa remains committed to mutually beneficial trade that promotes industrial growth over extractive partnerships, as it works to stabilise its global trade position.

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