25% tariffs on goods coming in from Mexico and Canada are not a disaster for Canada or Mexico. There will be declines in U.S. sales, but those countries can still consume those goods domestically or export to other nations. So companies making those goods will see profits fall for the portion of their sales that go to the next highest bidders.
But Americans will be paying higher prices on all Canadian and Mexican imports they buy, or for higher-priced domestic substitutes where available. But many lower-income Americans will be priced out of the market for those goods entirely.
So the tariffs portend more negative consequences for Americans than they do for Canadians or Mexicans. If either Mexico or Canada retaliates with tariffs of their own, the effect will be the same. Their own citizens will suffer more than Americans. That is the unique nature of a trade war. Each side suffers most from its own offensive.
The best way for Mexico and Canada to win is not to retaliate. That would include not providing any subsidies to exporters or any attempt to weaken their currencies. That would only reduce the sting tariffs have on Americans, shift the burden to their own people, and prolong the trade war.
thecrazyone wrote:I feel like going after these countries are just low hanging fruit. I think China is the one to get new rules imposed on.
The sweeping tariff could make more expensive a host of items that the U.S. imports from its neighbors. Among the common Mexican imports that will now get pricier to bring into the country: fruits, vegetables, beer, liquor and electronics. And from Canada: potatoes, grains, lumber and steel.
. Interesting. Thanks for sharing.natsb88 wrote:The nostalgia of everything being better when the US assessed many tariffs comes from a time when there were very low or no federal income or corporate taxes, much lower regulatory burden, and the technology and capacity for global trade was nothing like we have today. There is no serious proposal to address most of the factors that make mass manufacturing of so many things in the US impractical, therefore tariffs are just an additional tax on Americans that will exacerbate existing inflationary pressures.
mtalbot_ca wrote:natsb88 wrote:The nostalgia of everything being better when the US assessed many tariffs comes from a time when there were very low or no federal income or corporate taxes, much lower regulatory burden
mtalbot_ca wrote:. Interesting. Thanks for sharing.natsb88 wrote:The nostalgia of everything being better when the US assessed many tariffs comes from a time when there were very low or no federal income or corporate taxes, much lower regulatory burden, and the technology and capacity for global trade was nothing like we have today. There is no serious proposal to address most of the factors that make mass manufacturing of so many things in the US impractical, therefore tariffs are just an additional tax on Americans that will exacerbate existing inflationary pressures.
Lemon Thrower wrote:I think everything would be much better without an income tax and a lower regulatory burden. I think that is a reasonable view, Constitutional, and not merely "nostalgic."
silverflake wrote:I'd rather have a tariff as a sort of proxy "sales tax" than have an income tax.
68Camaro wrote:Tariffs have two useful related purposes: . . . .
China’s finance ministry said Tuesday it will impose additional tariffs of 15% on coal and liquified natural gas imports from the U.S., starting Feb. 10.
China will also levy 10% higher duties on American crude oil, farm equipment and certain cars and trucks, as well as enacting export controls on certain products related to critical minerals.
In retaliation for Trump's 10% tax on Americans who buy Chinese goods, China will tax its own citizens 15% on U.S. coal & liquefied natural gas, and 10% on U.S. crude oil, farm equipment, SUVs, and pickup truck purchases. A better response would have been selling U.S. Treasuries.
Lemon Thrower wrote:68Camaro wrote:Tariffs have two useful related purposes: . . . .
Tarriffs have an additional purpose - to level the playing field.
If US manufacturers have to comply with safety and pollution regulations, but a manufacturer in China can save 25% because those laws do not apply to them (nor does global warming somehow, go figure), then a 25% import tariff simply levels the playing field and makes production in the US competititve. Another example would be a company in Canada or Europe that pay lower taxes than in the US because Canada or Europe underfunds their military and free rides on the U.S. Now, these are political arguments, and reasonable people may differ on where things stand. But what is inarguable is that tariffs can serve a third purpose - to balance inequities in trade or regulation.
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