Sunday, June 30, 2019

Trump's Tariffs Are A Huge Tax On Ordinary Americans

(The caricature of Donald Trump is by DonkeyHotey.)

Donald Trump is proud of the tariffs he has placed on goods from other countries. He wants you to think those tariffs will force those countries to agree with what he wants. He also wants you to believe those other countries actually pay those tariffs. Neither is true.

The truth is that other countries don't pay tariffs on goods imported into this country. The importers pay those taxes, and then pass the cost on to American consumers. Trump's tariffs is just a giant (and secret) tax on ordinary Americans.

Here's how former Labor Secretary Robert Reich explains it:

It’s bad enough that the Trump administration has now imposed tariffs on America’s closest trading partners – because those tariffs will raise prices on everything from clothing to cars. 
Even worse — and this will come as no surprise — Trump and his enablers are lying about the consequences of these trade wars.
First, a bit about tariffs: Tariffs operate exactly like taxes – on you. 
When the U.S. imposes tariffs on a country, like China, that raises costs for companies doing business there. And then those companies pass on their increased costs to you in the form of higher prices, as even Trump’s own economic advisor Larry Kudlow acknowledged 
I haven’t even mentioned the costs to American workers of losing their jobs because China and other nations subject to Trump’s tariffs retaliate by raising tariffs on our exports to them. 
Here’s another lie they’re trying to push: Trump’s chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, claims that tariffs aren’t paid by American consumers because ”it’s relatively easy to substitute other goods” from other countries. Mulvaney also predicts a jump in U.S. production of consumer goods to fill the gap
This, my friends, is total rubbish.
It’s not at all easy to substitute other goods at the same low prices as we can get them from Mexico or China. Companies have chosen these countries as their supplier not because the companies like the weather or food, but because it’s cheaper to make or buy stuff there than elsewhere. 
There won’t be a jump in production here in the U.S. “to fill the gap,” because if it becomes too expensive to make or buy in China or Mexico, American companies will switch production to somewhere else that’s not as cheap as China or Mexico but still cheaper than making things in the United States – say, elsewhere in Latin America, or in Southeast Asia. 
Once again, Trump’s economic nationalism is hurting ordinary Americans without creating a single new job. 
Know the truth about tariffs – and spread it.

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