US companies, consumers are paying for tariffs, not foreign firms

bloomberg.com

136 points by petethomas 11 hours ago


djoldman - 11 hours ago

https://archive.ph/wbPDv

xnx - 10 hours ago

Crazy that one of the major policy initiatives of the all Republican/Maga government is to impose a huge consumer tax increase.

Maybe calling these "import taxes" instead of "tarrifs" would help emphasize that to the average voter?

swordsmith - 9 hours ago

Everyone focusing on consumer prices. But tariffs also function to incentivize domestic reindustrialization, which has huge national security implications. You see this clearly in the venture space as increased investment interest in hardtech and manufacturing. It's great that the federal government is looking long term again.

elevation - 3 hours ago

Supply side economics, which aims to stimulate growth by reducing costs for industry, is jeered today as “trickle down economics”; it’s considered regressive because the benefits are concentrated for suppliers while the benefits to consumers never materialise. This policy has “failed every time it’s tried!”

Tariffs are the antithesis of supply side strategy. Yet tariffs, which increase costs for suppliers like any other tax, are derided by the same people as “regressive” as if they will always be born 100% by the consumer. Supposedly, tariffs cannot possibly benefit the working class on any time scale.

At least one of these positions must be at least partly wrong. Which is it?

arunabha - 3 hours ago

The irony of the situation is that tariffs can work to make domestic industry more competitive, if they are applied strategically and backed by focused industrial policy.

China's dominance of the EV market is a recent case in point. China went from having approximately zero percent of the EV market in 2008 to completely dominating by the end of 2024 with an end to end vertically integrated EV manufacturing capability and a definite technological edge in some of the most critical areas. It took a decade plus of stringent protection for the fledgling EV industry and a couple of hundred billion dollars in subsidies, but they have ensured their dominance of the EV industry for a generation at the very least.

The US on the other hard, applied tariffs in an indiscriminate, chaotic manner(no one sane is going to invest anything when US policy depends on the whim of the president) and applied it even to raw materials which our remaining industries desperately need.

Also, instead of creating sound industrial policy, we seem to be hell bent on destroying the very foundations of US dominance in many industries by actively attacking science and technology in the country, from gutting scientifically focused agencies to waging a vicious war on universities and foreign students.

All of this for what? To add 5 trillion to our debt by passing a tax cut that predominantly benefits corporations and billionaires? To make the MAGA base feel good about making life miserable for 'the others'? This truly feels like the beginning of the end for the American empire or even the American experiment.

You can never count out the American capability for reinvention, but at some point, patches and refactorings stop working and you need a rewrite.

legitster - 11 hours ago

A reminder, most tariffs will not be paid because consumers will just shift their spending habits to match or just buy less.

Tariffs are a double edged sword because the hurt purchasing power of consumers without really generating much money for the government.

The administration is going to focus on the fact that tariffs don't really drive inflation, but are going to miss the forest for the trees: prices won't go up because we all have become a little poorer.

rob_c - 5 hours ago

Given the desire to weaken the dollar... Isn't that kind of the expected goal?

jacknews - 3 hours ago

The point of tariffs is to make foreign goods (including parts) more expensive, and therefore spur a shift in production.

Not to somehow make foreign firms pay more or whatever, how would that work?

tuatoru - 8 hours ago

In my trade economics textbook years ago it was stated that the cleared customs cost of an imported good is no more than 30% of its final consumer price, and more typically 10%. The rest is inland logistics, retail costs, and marketing.

Further to that, 80% of the economy is services or otherwise has nothing to do with imports. Tariffs are not affecting haircuts or yoga classes or bank fees.

Seems to me like tariffs are being used as a convenient excuse.

Dig1t - 3 hours ago

It is a tax on businesses who import things right? Basically exactly the same as corporate income tax, which Trump cut in his first term.

Now the tax is being raised on companies who import goods made overseas, but companies who make their product in the US don’t have to pay the tax.

If you are usually the type of person that supports taxing the rich and taxing large businesses, shouldn’t tariffs be something that you generally are in favor of?

HeavyStorm - 4 hours ago

Well duh

msgodel - 5 hours ago

Everyone keeps talking about "taxing the rich." Then Trump decides to tax luxury consumption and they all wig out.

486sx33 - 5 hours ago

As much as Bloomberg used to be a great business resource, it seems a bit bias now and the paywall is super annoying. However I’d still consider it a legitimate source.

I can say from my supply chain experience, which I can’t really disclose, other than to say it’s substantial in my world, I directly negotiate purchases from Asia (various regions) of between $25 million to $75 million per year.

If those statements are in conflict with my various NDAs then it was a typo.

Moving on, since the tariffs have hit, the deals I’ve negotiated have had substantial pre tariff discounts. For example, a widget that used to cost me $219k before tariff now costs me $159k plus tariff.

My takeaway is yes, consumers are going to pay more as the post tariff price is higher than the pre tariff price. BUT the suppliers are taking haircuts, and they are getting more aggressive with eachother. The Chinese government doesn’t want to directly say they are going to further subsidize production costs in China due to American tariffs, but some of this is happening and may accelerate as demand further drops. Just my humble opinion.

kazinator - 11 hours ago

This only needs to be explained to Americans who are somehow still hanging on to Donald Trump's explanation of tariffs: that they are gonna make foreigners pay.

Tariffs are taxes that locals pay on stuff imported from abroad.

wetpaws - 5 hours ago

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hamuraijack - 11 hours ago

The sky is blue

toomuchtodo - 10 hours ago

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almosthere - 11 hours ago

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megabless123 - 11 hours ago

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pessimizer - 11 hours ago

American tariffs are meant to be paid by Americans, and not usually meant to damage foreign companies. A rise in the price of imports is not an unforeseen consequence of tariffs, it's their entire purpose. This is basic knowledge that everybody at Bloomberg knows. You know the tariffs are targeted well enough because Bloomberg is against them; they wouldn't care at all if they felt that the costs could be passed onto the consumer. The consumer, when confronted with high prices due to tariffs, often buys something else that is not subject to tariffs.

Grover Norquist is smiling from the grave right now, watching this bipartisan anti-tax push.

More interesting to me is how Trump has managed to multiply the effects of tariffs by creating complete chaos (either on purpose or by accident.) The tariffs never turn out to be as high as they were marketed as. They are reapplied and dropped on alternate months. He makes the ending of tariffs contingent on actual concessions on other issues that the US is concerned about, but also makes them contingent on bullshit that no one would ever agree to.

All of this is creating the stress that causes people to restructure their supply chains, manufacturing, and logistics, at first to get the flexibility to adjust when Trump veers, but they can always see the alternative of cutting out imports at all which would frees them from any of that. The drama ("uncertainty") around tariffs is in and of itself a tariff (that will be seen in prices) that isn't being collected by the government, it's going into efforts by businesses to onshore and/or diversify their vendors. That onshoring is also going to raise consumer prices until it lowers them again.

That would be the price for demanding US labor standards be used in making US products, too. If we wanted to stop depending on foreign slave labor for cheap disposable shit, I don't know how we do that without tariffs. "Free trade" is an active enemy of labor rights.

drewcoo - 11 hours ago

Tariffs are supposed to change consumer behavior.

What's next? Is Bloomberg going to be telling us that fluoridation is preventing tooth demineralization and not actually helping the Communists?

thaumasiotes - 11 hours ago

"Not Foreign Companies"? They can both pay. Taxes are negative-sum.

aussieguy1234 - 5 hours ago

That this is surprising to a large group of Americans speaks to how uneducated a lot of them are. Not sure if it has something to do with the underfunded school system?

xnx - 10 hours ago

Foreign labor seems to be one of the few things not covered by these import taxes.

daft_pink - 10 hours ago

honestly, it’s a little of everything. foreign companies will eat the tariffs to some extent, consumers will shift to less tariffed goods and consumers will pay the tariffs.

however, paying the tariffs is essentially paying taxes and the government needs money and there’s nothing wrong with that. this one has the extra sword of helping our other Americans find work and increasing the likelihood that foreign goods will be purchased from allied nations and not totalitarian dictatorships with goals that might end in ww3 with the usa, while not completely cratering our economic system with full and immediate decoupling.

throwawaymaths - 5 hours ago

there are so many second order effects here who knows. for example (and im not saying this will always be the case) if a tariff pushes a foreign company's good out of the us marketplace and the customer is "forced" to pay 2x for something domestically manufactured that lasts 4x as long, did the american "pay for it"? how would this look in bulk economic data (spoiler it would look bad because consumption went down)

mensetmanusman - 11 hours ago

Tariffs are just a mechanism to adjust the calculus of where something is made.

Consumers getting Nd:YAG lasers from China below cost are also weakening the laser supply chain elsewhere. Tariffs are a type of response to these situations.

hereme888 - 5 hours ago

Try asking ChatGPT what are the intended effects of these tariffs. It's to benefit ALL Americans.

Also, obvious political bias.