Donald “the Tariffman” Trump will announce today a 25% tariff on all goods coming from Mexico and Canada and a 10% additional tariff on all goods coming from China. And this is only the beginning with additional tariffs on E.U. products and some specific duties coming. The tariffs on Canadian and Mexican products are an obvious violation of the United States-Mexico-Canada Treaty that Trump signed when he was president the first time.
To put the tariff question in context, the U.S. imported $3.3 trillion of goods last year, about 11% of our GDP. On a purely arithmetic basis, a 10% tariff on all imports would raise the price level by approximately one percent and a 20% tariff would raise the price level by 2%. However, a potentially stronger dollar and foreign producers absorbing part of the cost would partially reduce the inflationary impact.
Although many economists poo-poo the long-term inflationary impact of the tariffs as a one-time increase, I am skeptical. Why? First, the tariffs will cause a costly rejiggering of supply chains in the longer run, and second in the short run there will be chaos at the Mexican and Canadian border points of entry where all goods shipment will be held up until the tariff is paid. Further it is not clear to me how consumers will respond to the price increases. Instead of thinking like an economist, many consumers might believe that a new inflationary spiral has started. Recall, all the talk about the transitory nature of inflation in 2022.
Importantly, we have to remember that tariffs are an excise tax on imports. As such they raise prices and reduce output with stagflation being the result. Throwing sand into the gears of the economy can hardly promote growth. To the contrary it will stifle growth and add to inflation.
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