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Largest ever plunge in UK exports to US as Trump tariffs hurt growth; Britain ‘turning into a National Health State’ – business live | Business

UK exports to US plunge by record amount after Trump tariffs

UK trade with the United States plunged in April, as Donald Trump’s announcement of new tariffs hit demand for goods.

Exports of UK goods to the United States fell by £2bn in April, the Office for National Statistics reports, which is another factor why the UK economy shrank so sharply during the month.

This is the largest monthly decrease in trade with the US since records began in January 1997 and follows four months of consecutive increases.

The ONS says this decline is “likely linked to the implementation of tariffs on goods imported to the United States”.

UK exports of goods to the United States fell substantially in April 2025, likely linked to the introduction of trade tariffs
Photograph: ONS

Today’s trade data shows there was a fall in exports of cars, non-ferrous metals and chemical exports to the US in April.

On 2 April, Trump announced that imports from the UK would face a blanket 10% tariff under his new trading system. UK steel producers and carmakers faced higher tariffs, although these should fall under the US-UK trade deal agreed in May.

ONS Director of Economic Statistics Liz McKeown says:

“After increasing for each of the four preceding months, April saw the largest monthly fall on record in goods exports to the United States with decreases seen across most types of goods, following the recent introduction of tariffs.”

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Helena Horton

Helena Horton

In Britain’s agriculture sector, the National Farmers’ Union has accused Defra’s Steve Reed of “misleading” spending review claims over the farming budget.

The department has claimed payments for the nature-friendly farming programme, called the Environment Land Management Schemes, will “skyrocket” from £800m in 2023/24 to £2bn in 2028/29. This, on the face of it, looks like a large funding increase and has been reported by some as such.

However, it doesn’t look to be. This is because after the UK left the EU, farmers were promised that their subsidies would be the same as they were under the EU, and were promised a figure of £2.4bn a year.

The Tory government at the time decided that rather than being paid per acre, farmers should be paid for improving nature so devised the ELMS schemes, but while these got up and running the acreage payments known as Basic Payments Schemes (BPS) were kept. These would be cut each year as the ELMS increased and are due to be phased out entirely by 2028.

So, farmers currently get the £2.4bn a year in two streams – the ELMS and the BPS – as well as a smaller amount of money in grants for things like robotics trials.

By 2028/29 they will not be paid BPS so will only get ELMS and this will have a value of £2bn. There may be some other grants available to top this up, but this has not been confirmed.

In reality, the government has promised an average of £2.3bn a year up to 2028/29 for the farming budget, which is a £100m a year cut, and by the end of the spending period it looks like the budget shrinks to not much more than £2bn.

NFU senior economist Sanjay Dhanda has said Defra has been “misleading” in its claims.

He said:

“A key pillar of Defra’s budget is the continued investment in ELMs, with funding set to rise to £2 billion by 2028/29 compared to the £1.8 billion earmarked in the Autumn 2024 budget. While the government has framed this as a significant uplift from the £800 million spent in 2023/24, this comparison is misleading as ELMs was not fully operational at that point, and de-linked payments (BPS) absorbed a large share of funding.

“The actual increase is a modest £200 million over four years – barely sufficient to keep pace with inflation, let alone scale up delivery.”

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