Mint Quick Edit | Tariffs: Will penguins stop ripping the US off?

Heard and McDonald Islands near Antarctica, whose only residents are penguins and seals, is listed as a place whose goods shipped to the US will now attract an import levy. (Wikimedia Commons)
Heard and McDonald Islands near Antarctica, whose only residents are penguins and seals, is listed as a place whose goods shipped to the US will now attract an import levy. (Wikimedia Commons)

Summary

  • Goods shipped to America from Heard and McDonald Islands near Antarctica will face a 10% import tariff levied by Trump on Liberation Day. Penguins, seals and other inhabitants may have to learn not to get in the way of American greatness.

While brains are wracked over the global impact of US tariffs, what has left many particularly zapped is the inclusion of a group of remote islands in its target list. Heard and McDonald Islands near Antarctica is listed as a place whose goods shipped to the US will now attract a 10% import levy.

This has not left its residents in a flap, though. No human being lives there. The islands are inhabited mostly by penguins and seals.

Also Read: Trade war: Trump’s shock-and-awe tariffs only have a faint silver lining for India

On rare occasions, researchers drop by and set up camp in this “external territory" of Australia, but it’s a long boat ride from Perth. Norfolk Island, another such territory about 5,000km away, has been slapped with a tariff of 29%, although America’s trade barrier for shipments from Australia will be set at 10%.

Also Read: Andy Mukherjee: Trump’s tariffs should push India to double down on reforms

With a population of only 2,188 people, Norfolk seems like an unlikely threat to American greatness, no matter how it’s defined. Is it ripping the US off? Its administrator has reportedly denied any exports to America or curbs placed on imports from it.

Also Read: Indira Rajaraman: US Liberation Day tariffs target the WTO’s playing field

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese decoded the US signal in just five words: “Nowhere on earth is safe," he observed. Indeed. It’s what happens when policy is shaped by the beauty of words in a dictionary.

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