Washington (AFP) – President Donald Trump’s tariffs and the retaliation they attracted will likely weigh on US growth and boost inflation, according to analysts. However, beyond that, uncertainty surrounding the levies threatens to overshadow optimism about his future policies.
Trump reignited trade wars this week with hefty duties on Canadian, Mexican, and Chinese imports, drawing sharp retaliation from Ottawa and Beijing, including new tariffs on key American farm products. Collectively, these could dent US GDP growth by one percentage point and hike inflation by 0.6 points if kept in place for the year, said Nationwide chief economist Kathy Bostjancic. “Tariffs represent a negative supply shock. It hurts production, raises prices,” she told AFP, warning that business and consumer confidence also take a hit from levies.
The unpredictability of Trump’s tariff plans stands to offset positivity about the president’s promises of deregulation and tax cuts, which are seen as pro-growth, Bostjancic said. “That hope and excitement right now is overwhelmed by the uncertainty of what’s going to play out,” she added. It also remains unclear if new tariffs will be long-lasting, and they come atop cost-cutting measures in the federal government, which are being challenged in courts, KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk noted. The fallout from these efforts can undermine demand.
Trump has not only quickened the pace of tariff hikes in his second term by tapping emergency economic powers to impose them without an investigation period, but his levies cover a larger value of goods. Trump’s first-term tariffs hit $380 billion worth of US imports over 2018-2019, mainly from China, noted Erica York of the Tax Foundation. But his latest duties, introduced over a month, impact $1.4 trillion of imports, mostly from allies. “Because of the faster implementation and the larger magnitude, the new tariffs will be much more disruptive to the US economy than Trump’s first trade war,” York emphasized.
While the situation is fluid, Bostjancic indicated that prices of products like motor vehicle parts could rise by 10 percent within months, given how integrated North American supply chains are. This could inflate consumer costs for big-ticket items. Used car prices could increase if producing new vehicles became pricey, analysts warned. New homes stand to become more expensive too, potentially making property owners reluctant to move and weighing on the housing market, said Jessica Lautz at the National Association of Realtors. Trump’s latest 25 percent tariff on Canadian goods hits lumber imports, which are important to homebuilders.
With the breadth of Trump’s current tariff plans, “some companies may not be able to maintain the same level of employment,” Swonk of KPMG warned. During Trump’s first term, despite an initial uptick in steel industry employment when he imposed tariffs on imports of the metal, these were more than offset by higher input costs and layoffs elsewhere, she noted.
Other near-term effects include countries’ readiness to hit US “choke points” following experiences from his first administration, Swonk stated. “They’re going to look for the places that are the biggest pinch points for the president’s party, and that’s the Republican Party,” she told AFP. This means taking aim at Republican-dominated states. When the world’s biggest economy takes action like sweeping tariffs, other countries tend to respond strategically, targeting countermeasures at areas that likely have more political sway over the administration, she added.
Farm and food products are often primary targets of retaliation, according to Wendong Zhang of Cornell University. This could spark the need for federal aid to farmers subsequently. Already, China announced it would impose 10 percent and 15 percent levies on various US agricultural exports, including soybeans. In Trump’s first term, retaliatory tariffs on the United States caused more than $27 billion in US agricultural export losses from mid-2018 to late-2019.
Economists say the hit to growth and inflation in 2025 could be somewhat counterbalanced by aggressive deregulation efforts next year, as Trump’s government seeks to rein in the budget deficit and make certain tax cuts permanent. For now, the “uncertainty effect” serves as a tax of its own, Swonk concluded.
© 2024 AFP