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Trump advisor says that more than 50 countries have reached out to the White House in order to begin trade negotiations.

Douglas Gillison & Ted Hesson

WASHINGTON - On Sunday, more than 50 countries had contacted the White House in order to start trade negotiations, according to a top adviser to U.S. president Donald Trump. This was as U.S. officials defended the new, massive tariffs which have caused global chaos.

Kevin Hassett, Director of the U.S. National Economic Council, denied in an interview with ABC News' "This Week" that Trump's tariffs are part of his strategy to crash the financial markets and pressure the U.S. Federal Reserve into cutting interest rates.

He stated that there would be no "political pressure" on the central bank. Trump posted a video on Truth Social on Friday that implied his tariffs were designed to deliberately hammer down the stock market in order to lower interest rates.

Scott Bessent, U.S. Treasury secretary, said in a separate interview with NBC News’s Meet the Press that there is "no reason to expect" a recession based solely on the tariffs.

Trump shocked economies around the globe after he announced tariffs on U.S. imported goods on Wednesday. This triggered retaliatory measures from China, and sparked fears of a global trade war and recession.

Top Trump officials appeared on Sunday morning talk shows to try and portray the tariffs in a positive light, as an intelligent repositioning by the U.S. within the global trading order. They also tried to paint the economic disruptions in a negative light as a temporary fallout.

The U.S. stock market has fallen by about 10% in just two days after Trump announced his new global tariff regime, which was much more aggressive than analysts or investors expected.

Market analysts and major investors blame this drop on Trump's aggressive tariffs. Most economists and U.S. Federal Reserve head believe that Trump's aggressive approach to tariffs could cause inflation and damage economic growth.

Markets that have been stunned by tariffs will face another week.

Potential Tariff Trouble

Investors are on edge following the worst week of U.S. stock prices since the COVID-19 Crisis five years ago.

Hassett said that ABC News' "This Week" reported that Trump's tariffs have so far prompted "more than fifty" countries to contact White House for trade talks.

Taiwan's president Lai Ching Te on Sunday

offered zero tariffs

As the basis for negotiations with the U.S.

Hassett, unlike other economists said that he didn't expect consumers to be hit hard because exporters would likely lower prices.

Bessent said to NBC News that he didn't anticipate a recession based upon the tariffs.

stronger-than-anticipated

U.S. jobs growth.

Bessent stated that "we could see that the number of jobs on Friday was above expectations and that we are progressing. I do not see any reason to price in a possible recession."

(source: Reuters)