jmacvols1
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beginning at 1:20 mark, seems like I said something similar to this a few months ago....
from GROK:
from GROK:
- At the 1:20 mark, Victor Davis Hanson discusses how foreign competitors, such as Japanese, Chinese, and European entities, might have calculated that a 15% profit margin is sufficient to make money in the U.S. market without raising prices for American consumers.
- He suggests that these competitors are willing to pay tariffs as an "entry charge" to access the vast U.S. consumer market, implying a strategic decision to accept the tariffs as part of their business model.
- Hanson questions the conventional wisdom that tariffs would lead to higher prices for Americans, arguing that foreign entities might still find it profitable to operate under these conditions.
- This perspective is set against the backdrop of recent trade negotiations between the U.S. and the EU, where a 15% tariff on EU exports to the U.S. was agreed upon, a significant increase from pre-2017 rates [The Guardian, 2025-07-28].
- The discussion also relates to Hanson's personal experience with the raisin market, where EU subsidies in the 1980s led to market distortion, a concern that remains relevant given the lack of specific provisions for raisins in the new trade deal [EveryCRSReport.com, 2011-03-21].
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