Trade Wars and Tariffs


"Research conducted on the impact of tariffs from President Trump’s first term suggests that these measures fortified the U.S. economy. A 2024 study highlighted that tariffs resulted in significant reshoring in sectors such as manufacturing and steelmaking, while a 2023 U.S. International Trade Commission report revealed that tariffs curtailed imports from China and promoted local production.

The report indicated minor downstream price effects, aligning with findings by the Economic Policy Institute, which emphasized that the tariffs did not exacerbate inflation and had a negligible impact on prices overall.

“Following implementation of Sec. 232 measures in 2018—and prior to the global downturn in 2020—U.S. steel output, employment, capital investment, and financial performance all improved,” the Economic Policy Institute stated. This period saw U.S. steel producers commit over $15.7 billion to new or upgraded facilities, generating approximately 3,200 jobs.

A further analysis conducted by the Atlantic Council points to a potential increase in domestic product purchases prompted by tariffs. The Treasury Secretary under the Biden regime, Janet Yellen, supported this stance, stating that consumer prices would not significantly rise as a result of tariffs.

A separate 2024 economic analysis projected that a global 10 percent tariff could stimulate $728 billion in economic growth, create 2.8 million jobs, and lift real household incomes by 5.7 percent.


During President Trump’s first term, tariffs bolstered the iron ore industry in Minnesota, supported thousands of new jobs, led to investments exceeding $10 billion, and decreased steel and aluminum imports by nearly one-third from 2016 to 2020."
 


Complete incoherence. At no point does she connect the dots with free trade being good for Wall Street but bad for the people. I assume because of manufacturing jobs? Manufacturing output in the United States has consistently risen over the last 60 years. We make more with less labor because of labor costs and rules that aren't business-friendly. A lack of protectionism (which doesn't exist, we have always been protectionists) is not to blame for the decline in manufacturing jobs.

The working class is going to get hit the hardest. Wall Street's going to be OK, as always.
 

"Research conducted on the impact of tariffs from President Trump’s first term suggests that these measures fortified the U.S. economy. A 2024 study highlighted that tariffs resulted in significant reshoring in sectors such as manufacturing and steelmaking, while a 2023 U.S. International Trade Commission report revealed that tariffs curtailed imports from China and promoted local production.

The report indicated minor downstream price effects, aligning with findings by the Economic Policy Institute, which emphasized that the tariffs did not exacerbate inflation and had a negligible impact on prices overall.

“Following implementation of Sec. 232 measures in 2018—and prior to the global downturn in 2020—U.S. steel output, employment, capital investment, and financial performance all improved,” the Economic Policy Institute stated. This period saw U.S. steel producers commit over $15.7 billion to new or upgraded facilities, generating approximately 3,200 jobs.

A further analysis conducted by the Atlantic Council points to a potential increase in domestic product purchases prompted by tariffs. The Treasury Secretary under the Biden regime, Janet Yellen, supported this stance, stating that consumer prices would not significantly rise as a result of tariffs.

A separate 2024 economic analysis projected that a global 10 percent tariff could stimulate $728 billion in economic growth, create 2.8 million jobs, and lift real household incomes by 5.7 percent.


During President Trump’s first term, tariffs bolstered the iron ore industry in Minnesota, supported thousands of new jobs, led to investments exceeding $10 billion, and decreased steel and aluminum imports by nearly one-third from 2016 to 2020."
That's not what happened. I need you to check your sources.
 

"Research conducted on the impact of tariffs from President Trump’s first term suggests that these measures fortified the U.S. economy. A 2024 study highlighted that tariffs resulted in significant reshoring in sectors such as manufacturing and steelmaking, while a 2023 U.S. International Trade Commission report revealed that tariffs curtailed imports from China and promoted local production.

The report indicated minor downstream price effects, aligning with findings by the Economic Policy Institute, which emphasized that the tariffs did not exacerbate inflation and had a negligible impact on prices overall.

“Following implementation of Sec. 232 measures in 2018—and prior to the global downturn in 2020—U.S. steel output, employment, capital investment, and financial performance all improved,” the Economic Policy Institute stated. This period saw U.S. steel producers commit over $15.7 billion to new or upgraded facilities, generating approximately 3,200 jobs.

A further analysis conducted by the Atlantic Council points to a potential increase in domestic product purchases prompted by tariffs. The Treasury Secretary under the Biden regime, Janet Yellen, supported this stance, stating that consumer prices would not significantly rise as a result of tariffs.

A separate 2024 economic analysis projected that a global 10 percent tariff could stimulate $728 billion in economic growth, create 2.8 million jobs, and lift real household incomes by 5.7 percent.


During President Trump’s first term, tariffs bolstered the iron ore industry in Minnesota, supported thousands of new jobs, led to investments exceeding $10 billion, and decreased steel and aluminum imports by nearly one-third from 2016 to 2020."
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The only point can possibly be that we all should pay more for coffee and bananas. There is no other logic.

Well they are reciprocal tariffs so perhaps Costa Rica has a tariff on US Goods (knowing LA, it is probably a blanket tariff on everyone, not just USA).
 
For anyone who thinks this is even remotely a good idea:

Please explain the reasoning behind the 10% tariff on Costa Rica. The two primary imports from Costa Rica are bananas and coffee. The US produces negligible amounts of both. This is not something that can be cured by "bringing production back to the US." Hawaii is the only state in which either can be grown on a commercial scale, and bringing products from Hawaii to the continent is usually more expensive that importing them from Central America. Please tell me how this tariff makes any sense whatsoever.
Stop messing with coffee production!!!!
 
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You cannot seriously think that auto workers are going to take a big pay cut, can you? Especially given the spike in inflation roundly predicted is coming given this nonsensical Trump experiment?
Given we’ve survived 23% hike over the last 2-1/2 years and you said the economy was awesome, I’m not sure people will even feel a 4% hit
 
That’s not entirely my point. But it is related. More so my point is that a global corporate tax also gets passed on to the consumer in the form of inflation the same way as tariffs.

So if you oppose tariffs due to inflation, it would be logical to oppose corporate taxes also. Especially on a global scale.

Every tax increases the cost of goods or services. Cant get rid of them altogether if you want anything done.
 
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