Donald Trump Announces 100% Tariffs On Movies Made Outside US: ‘Our Business Has Been Stolen…’
By News18,Saurabh Verma,Shankhyaneel Sarkar
Copyright news18
US President Donald Trump on Monday said his nation will impose a 100% tariff on all movies made outside the country. “Our movie making business has been stolen from the United States of America, by other Countries, just like stealing ‘candy from a baby’,” he said in a social media post on Truth Social, a social media platform he owns.
A report by Reuters said that Trump had threatened to impose such levies earlier in May but offered few details, leading to confusion among entertainment industry executives.
The United States contributes nearly 35 to 40 percent of the overseas box office for Indian films, making it the single most important foreign market for Bollywood and regional cinema alike.
Ticket prices and distribution costs could double if the new rules are fully enforced, pushing many Indian film releases into the unviable category. Smaller and mid-budget productions are seen as the most vulnerable, with their margins already razor thin.
Trump had appointed veteran Hollywood actors Jon Voight, Sylvester Stallone and Mel Gibson to bring the industry back “bigger, better and stronger than ever before” in January, according to the Guardian.
Their report said that Voight and business associates Steven Paul and Scott Karol visited Trump at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, to discuss a carrot-and-stick approach to the revival of Hollywood in May.
“Thank God the president cares about Hollywood and movies. He has a great love for Hollywood in that way. We’ve got to roll up our sleeves here. We can’t let it go down the drain like Detroit,” Voight had said.
A separate report by entertainment news site Deadline had said that Voight and his associates proposed a 10 to 20% federal tax credit that would be “stackable” on what states already offer.
The report said that if a US producer chooses to shoot in a foreign country they would a tariff equal to 120% of the value of the foreign tax incentive received.
For the Indian diaspora in the US, estimated at over 5.2 million, this could mean sharply reduced access to theatres and significantly higher ticket costs.
As a result, the shift to OTT platforms is expected to accelerate, with audiences increasingly choosing streaming over theatrical viewing.
It remains unclear how tariffs on the film industry would work. Back in May, when the US President first threatened tariffs on the industry, he did not say whether he planned to apply them to streaming platforms as well as theatrical releases.
It was also not specified if the tariffs would be based on production costs or box office revenue. The Guardian, in a report published on May, also said that it remained unclear whether productions split between the US and other countries would be exempt.