Two Questions and Four Ironies About Trump's Tariffs
- Is this the most destructive Federal economic action in my 63-year lifetime? I am trying to think about the competition for this title. Certainly Nixon's wage and price controls would be up there in the top 5. The banking regulations that treated mortgages as preferred risk-free bank capital might be on the list. Perhaps we would include something like Biden's attempt to forgive a trillion dollars in student loans. There was some COVID craziness, including lockdowns and eviction moratoriums. But even looking at this collective Mt Rushmore of economic fail, I still think Trump's tariffs are at or near the top. This is as dumb as even the worst ideas of folks like AOC who the Republicans mock.
- How is this possibly Constitutional? Article 1 Section 8 gives Congress sole "Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises" and "All Bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives." I understand the spineless Congresses have delegated all sorts of powers to the Executive Branch, but good God there has to be some sort of limit. Where is that nationwide injunction when you need it? This is as a good a case as any for the courts to test both Executive taxation power, limits to delegation of authority, and the general use of emergency powers.
The tariffs also bring to mind several ironies:
- Trump called it "liberation day" but the actual day we celebrate liberation is the day the Declaration of Independence was signed. That document explains the King's injustices, including: "[the King] has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:...For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world [and] For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent" Can't find any exceptions for emergencies in this document or in the Constitution.**
- Republicans have spent 5 years (rightly) complaining about the exercise of emergency powers when the person who gets the power also gets to declare an emergency. And now they have topped anything Biden ever did with COVID emergency powers
- In economics, independence is the road to poverty. The most economically independent people in the world are the isolated primitive tribes in the Amazon. This stuff is not hard, we have understood it since David Ricardo was writing over 200 years ago. We literally understood how trade created value before we had invented the telegraph or the railroad or knew that germs caused diseases. We understood it before Iodine was discovered. My post on aluminum tariffs helped show the value of trade.
- This almost goes without saying, but after campaigning on inflation, Trump is directly adding to inflation. Back of the envelope, given that imports are about 16% of GDP, then a 25% average tariff on imports adds something like 4% to prices. Immediately inflation rates for this year go from 3% to 7%, and I am fairly certain this simplistic approach underestimates the problem. A family member works in the finance department of a well-known low-margin retailer and said that they were absolutely going to have to pass through tariffs and spent today working on the numbers. Sure, Trump is going to identify a few high-profile companies to name and shame for raising prices to pretend that companies should not be passing through these costs, but this is -- ironically again -- exactly as ignorant as Elizabeth Warren blaming grocer greed for food price increases, something that Republicans mocked by the way.***
I only have the time, and frankly the stomach, to put down these few quick thoughts on this one. More later.
Update: From Pat Toomey vis Powerline, this is as good of an explanation as I have seen for the theory in Trump's head that is driving tariff actions. This explains pretty well the calculathttps://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2025/04/toomey-on-trumps-tariffs.phpion of the tariffs, which appear to be more correlated with individual trade deficits than current reciprocal tariffs
This, I’m afraid, is going to take us down a bad path, Dominic. I think that we’re going to experience more aggressive tariffs than a lot of people think, because the president really believes that — what he really wants to go after is the trade deficits. What he really objects to, and from all of my arguments with him, I’m convinced that he believes — and if you listen to his language — he believes that if you have a trade deficit with another country, that is the measure of the amount that country steals from you. And that of course disregards that we get something when we purchase products from other countries, but this is the way he views it. He thinks that the Canadians are ripping us off, because we buy some more goods from them than they buy from us (by the way, the difference is fully explained by oil imports that are quite useful and important to us). But this is where we are. We’re going to have relearn this lesson. I do think the markets are going to respond very poorly, if I’m right and on April 2 we discover we’re having a more aggressive round of tariffs than we expect.
We are really in trouble. This is really next-level ignorance.
** Postscript: Tariffs rather than immigration is the topic of the day, but I was reminded in perusing the Declaration of Independence for this post that it also says this: "He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither"
***Postscript #2: The reason this likely underestimates inflation is because it does not take into account domestic producers raising their prices to partially match the price increases of their foreign competitors
It's worth noting that the only other Presidential candidate in the last quarter century or so that was economically brain-dead enough to push tariffs as a magical road to economic prosperity and bringing jobs back to the United States was... Bernie Sanders.
And perhaps it's a bit tin-foil hatty to think it (especially since Peter Navarro has been pushing Trump on this since his first term), but I just can't help but see George Soros's personal protegée and the guy Soros staked $2 billion of his own cash to when he started his own hedge fund, Scott Bessent, telling Trump over and over for the past year: Yeah, let's do this [and destroy every shred of credibility the GOP has ever had]!
FWIW, I think Trump will tank the economy so hard that he loses congress (where his margins are already razor-thin) in 2026, and gets impeached, convicted, and booted about five minutes after they're sworn in. Half his party hates his guts (the people in Washington DC that matter, not the voting cattle that can be safely ignored), and there's absolutely no way they save him. We'll be stuck with a thoroughly gelded JD Vance who will have no tools with which to turn this around, unless somehow they get somebody like Javier Milei telling him what to do.
"The most economically independent people in the world are the isolated primitive tribes in the Amazon"
I would argue that the Sentinelese of North Sentinel Island are more independent and isolated. It does not invalidate your conclusion though.
I am in agreement with your commentary of tariffs and the idiocy of trump administration levying tariffs.
That being said, the most likely result is that these tariffs will be short lived, lasting maybe 3-6 months, going quietly away and therefore should not spend much time going balistic over the tariffs.
I think you are likely overstating the inflationary impact of the tariffs. Without an increase in the supply of money it just means that the basket of goods will become smaller.
"That being said, the most likely result is that these tariffs will be short lived, lasting maybe 3-6 months, going quietly away..."
Kind of like Trump's COVID lockdowns, and we still haven't recovered from that.
I spent a lot of time in supply chain logistics, and both of these actions are like watching a country try to save itself by bombing itself. The insanity is just painful. It's straight-up economic self-harm.
Erik I agree that the tariffs that trump has imposed and/or will impose are idiodic and bad policy that will disrupt trade. However, as I stated, they are likely short lived (or at least we hope so).
Great. So it's not technically inflation, but fewer goods being chased by the same amount of money means that each dollar buys less. That is, the sticker price (denominated in USD) still goes up. The colloquial (if not quite correct) understanding is "inflation is when prices rise."
It'd be nice if some of the fallout is a severe curtailment of Congress's ability to delegate its powers.
Arguably worse than the direct effects of tariffs is the regulatory uncertainty. Especially since the 'reciprocal' tariffs include penalties for other forms of economic protection that aren't tariffs.
And, of course, tariffs aren't going to fix the problems that led to so much industry moving out of the country. Some of it was cheaper international shipping, some really was on-shoring behind foreign protective tariffs, but a lot of it was avoiding onerous domestic regulations. Which makes yet another entry in the classic "government broke it; the solution is more government" series.
I should point out that the Sentinelese are more isolated than anyone in the Amazon is.
No, "a rise in prices" is also the technical definition of inflation.
I came across this post on LinkedIn and felt the need to respond. We have been working with Asian, European and domestic supply chains for over 20 years. I have had the opportunity to testify in Washington DC at the ITC when anti-dumping duties were imposed on the quartz countertop industry.
We are overtaken with the "sound bite" mentality, who in this particular case, one US supplier, who incidentally had bought a bankrupt US company to obtain their exclusive licensing agreement with the Italian producer of quart production equipment so the company could have a virtual stranglehold on the high-end quartz countertop business ran out of their exclusive production equipment and had to compete with the rest of the world.
The sound bite in this case was after a high level conference with Trump 1.0 and cabinet members were "The Chinese are stealing US intellectual property." No doubt, there are cases where this is true. In this case, the IP was owned by an Italian producer and the American company exclusive ran out. The CEO of the Domestic quartz producer testified, "I was able to raise my prices each year for 17 consecutive years and this year, I couldn't because of the Chinese." My wife, who was sitting next to me at the hearing, asked me why we couldn't raise our prices consecutively over the same 17 year period. I answered, "because the market won't let us."
I had the honor of serving on a United Nations Prosperity Initiative in helping Vietnamese farmers grow bamboo for domestic use. We bring in a number of very sustainable products from Malaysia, Vietnam and China.. Bamboo is an incredible product for the future of sustainable construction. But we are now saddled, for the moment, with high duties and restricting the North American market with an incredible source for sustainable construction.
Who are the tariffs protecting, in this case? There is no domestic bamboo production. No loss of American jobs and consequently the baby gets thrown out with the bathwater.
Don't even think some industrial segments will return to the US. Furniture, textiles, apparel were losing their luster long before the world migrated to Asia.
It should terrify everyone in the room about rare earth, chips and other incredibly important products that are critical to national defense or national prosperity.
I am hoping that we regain a little sense of purpose, before we spend the next few years "recovering" from the most recent self imposed pain.
Congress could end this insanity in a day, but our representatives are too afraid to vote against trump.
Affordable Care Act,
Inflation Reduction Act,
entire response to Covid were all surely far more destructive and stupid.
I think it is a mistake to ever assume that Trump is stupid, venal or an idiot. He is a master of misdirection and what are you missing when you assume that tariffs mean what you think they mean and it turns out that there is an entire new meaning to Trade and deglobalization as the leading edge to rebuilding jobs and industry in the US?
We have seen the devastation that a flawed mystique of Supply Chain idiocy has brought about thanks to the Financial weight driving everything else off the field when it comes to trade and industry. Now we are going to try something new.
No, I don't think Trump's tariffs are anything at all like the Smoot-Hawley nonsense studied by economics majors and historians. Those were designed allegedly to protect industries. We don't have any left to protect anymore now do we? So that can't be it.