The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development published an April 2025 Global Trade Update, looking at the impact of “reciprocal tariffs” on small and vulnerable economies. The report finds that small and least developed countries represent a marginal share of the U.S. trade deficit – less than 0.1% each – but their export abilities will be disproportionately affected by the “reciprocal tariffs.”
The new tariffs would generate minimal additional revenue, even if import volumes remained unchanged. Thirty-six of our trading partners would generate less than 1% of current U.S. tariff revenues. We share the graphic below but note that it is a searchable table in the Global Trade Update.
Their conclusion?
This is a critical moment to consider exempting them from tariffs that offer little to no advantage for US trade policy while potentially causing serious economic harm abroad.
The report also includes a timeline of U.S. trade policy decisions.