Trump tells Davos elite to invest in US or face tariffs
Send a link to a friend
[January 24, 2025] By
ZEKE MILLER, JOSH BOAK and JAMEY KEATEN
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump used an address Thursday to the
World Economic Forum to promise global elites lower taxes if they bring
manufacturing to the U.S. and threatened to impose tariffs if they
don’t.
Speaking by video from the White House to the annual summit in Davos,
Switzerland, on his third full day in office, Trump ran through his
flurry of executive actions since his swearing-in and claimed that he
had a “massive mandate” from the American people to bring change. He
laid out a carrot-and-stick approach for private investment in the U.S.
“Come make your product in America and we will give you among the lowest
taxes as any nation on earth,” Trump said. “But if you don’t make your
product in America, which is your prerogative, then very simply, you
will have to pay a tariff — differing amounts — but a tariff, which will
direct hundreds of billions of dollars and even trillions of dollars
into our treasury to strengthen our economy and pay down debt under the
Trump administration.”
Trump, who spoke Wednesday to Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, also said
Thursday that the kingdom wants to invest $600 billion in the U.S. but
that he would ask Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to increase it to $1
trillion. The remark drew some laughter from the crowd in the hall in
Davos.
Introducing Trump, Davos founder Klaus Schwab told the new president
that his return and his agenda have “been at the focus of our
discussions this week.” He invited Trump to speak at the summit in
person next year.

Trump, who promised to end the Russia-Ukraine war before taking office,
said it remained a top priority, but he offered few clues for how he
would do so.
“One thing very important: I really would like to be able to meet with
President Putin soon and get that war ended,” Trump told the Davos
audience. “We really have to stop that war. That war is horrible”
Earlier in his address to the forum, Trump laid blame on the OPEC+
alliance of oil exporting countries for keeping the price of oil too
high for much of the nearly three-year war. Oil sales are the economic
engine driving Moscow’s economy.
“If the price came down, the Russia-Ukraine war would end immediately,”
Trump said. He added about OPEC+, “They are very responsible to a
certain extent for what’s taking place.”
[to top of second column] |

A woman takes pictures during a virtual speech of U.S. president
Donald Trump at the Annual Meeting of World Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland, Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)
 Oil prices have more recently
slumped due to weaker-than-expected demand from China as well as
increased production from countries such as Brazil and Argentina
that aren’t in OPEC+.
In the largest hall in the Davos Congress Center — seating capacity
850 — Trump’s appearance drew nearly standing-room-only turnout. The
crowd included diplomats, human rights advocates, academics and
business leaders. His return to the White House and his barrage of
executive orders have been the talk of the town this week in the
snowy Swiss town.
At times, Trump drew a few groans, like when he derided “inept”
members of the outgoing Biden administration. The loudest laughter
came when WEF President Borge Brende said Trump had called Chinese
President Xi Jinping over the weekend, and the U.S. leader quickly
corrected him: “He called me.”
The reaction from the audience was mixed. Some attendees enjoyed the
attention from Trump.
“I was impressed (by) the force of his convictions and by what he
said. I don’t share his opinion on many topics, but I thought he was
well prepared and knew who he was talking to,” said Benedict
Fontanet, a Swiss lawyer.
Others cringed at the “America First” ambitions of Trump yet again.
“It’s absolute determination to ‘make America great again’ at the
expense of the rest of the world,” said Agnes Callamard, secretary
general of Amnesty International. “It’s favoring American workers at
the expense of workers everywhere ... There’s nothing, nothing about
the rest of the world.”
___
Keaten reported from Davos, Switzerland. Associated Press writers
David Keyton in Davos and Aamer Madhani in Washington contributed to
this report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |