Wall Street Jedi
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • News
  • Economy
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Investing
  • Stock
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Economy
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Investing
  • Stock
No Result
View All Result
Wall Street Jedi
No Result
View All Result
Home Stock

Trump upended trade once, aims to do so again with new tariffs

by
January 16, 2025
in Stock
0
Trump upended trade once, aims to do so again with new tariffs
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By David Lawder

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Donald Trump came to Washington eight years ago vowing to rewrite U.S. trade relationships, shrink a massive goods trade deficit and rebuild America’s industrial base with new tariffs.

The president-elect is about to embark on an even more aggressive effort in his second term, pledging to impose 10% duties on all U.S. imports and 60% on goods from China. 

Just how that will play out is unclear, but data from his first run at upending the trade landscape show it did shift U.S. imports away from China to other countries, especially Mexico and Vietnam. Still, the U.S. trade deficit continued to grow, topping $1 trillion over the last four years, and factory employment has flatlined amid an overall jobs boom since the COVID-19 pandemic.

STEEL SLIDE

Steel producers in the U.S. benefited the most from Trump’s tariffs, winning a 25% global duty while aluminum producers saw a 10% duty. Those were somewhat diminished after Trump’s first administration negotiated quota deals with Mexico and Canada and the Biden administration followed up with quota deals for the European Union, Britain and Japan.

Meanwhile, China’s dominance of these sectors globally has kept prices low, contributing to lower capacity use rates.

Some plants initially revived by the duties, including a U.S. Steel mill in Granite City, Illinois, visited by Trump in 2018 to herald the industry’s resurgence, have shut down blast furnaces. A Missouri aluminum smelter revived by the tariffs also was idled last year by Magnitude 7 Metals.  

Trump’s biggest first-term trade impact was to shatter decades of political consensus favoring ever-lower trade barriers that had allowed China to become the world’s largest goods producer. Indeed, when Trump left office in 2021, the theme was taken up and amplified by President Joe Biden. 

“Waking the world up to the economic threat from China was one of the top accomplishments of Trump’s first-term trade agenda, as was the renegotiation of some of our major trading relationships,” including a North American free trade deal, said Kelly Ann Shaw, a trade adviser during Trump’s first term.

“We’re now having a healthy debate in America about what industries we want to keep, which supply chains are critical and where we should focus our trading relationships,” said Shaw, a trade lawyer at law firm Hogan Lovells in Washington.

Trump’s tariffs of 25% on $370 billion of Chinese imports helped reduce the U.S. trade deficit with China from $418 billion in 2018 to $279 billion in 2023. But as companies shifted production elsewhere, new winners emerged: Mexico and Vietnam. The growth of their U.S. trade surpluses more than made up for China’s decline.

RETALIATION, PRICING COSTS

This shift came at considerable cost. China hit back with retaliatory tariffs of 25% on U.S. soybean exports and largely shifted aircraft purchases away from Boeing (NYSE:BA) to rival Airbus for years.

U.S. whiskey distillers were hit by EU retaliation over metals tariffs, but exports rebounded when those tariffs came off, said Chris Swonger, CEO of the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States.  

In the 2020 “Phase 1” trade deal that ended the U.S.-China trade war, Beijing pledged to boost its purchases of U.S. goods and services by $200 billion over two years, but failed to do so as COVID-19 hit.

China’s promised increases in U.S. soybean volumes instead went to Brazil and Argentina. Scott Gerlt, the chief economist for the American Soybean Association, said that’s a permanent shift. 

“We never recovered the volume of China soybean exports since that trade war,” Gerlt said. “A lot of land came into production in Brazil. Brazil surpassed us in exports to China.”   

The shift could help China weather a new trade war, but the crop remains the top U.S. export to China.

Commercial aircraft once held the top spot but have been slow to recover, while motor vehicle shipments to China also declined as China’s electric vehicle industry has surged. Displacing them is crude oil, going from zero a decade ago to $13 billion in 2023.   

The U.S. remains highly dependent on China for technology imports, including smartphones, laptop computers and video game consoles. Many of these products were spared Trump’s first-term tariffs, but duties of 60% or more would raise costs considerably.     

China’s vast scale and efficiencies in sectors such as electronics and toys cannot be easily replicated elsewhere, creating difficult choices for companies facing steep tariffs, said Mary Lovely, a trade economist who is a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. 

“These are enormous enterprises. How do you recreate that in another country that’s a tenth of the size of China? You don’t,” Lovely added.

Trump’s first-term tariffs did not cause a spike in consumer price inflation, but they were limited in scope and caused only one-time price increases, said Doug Irwin, an economics professor at Dartmouth College who specializes in trade.

“Tariffs are just a tax, and so they lead to a one-off level increase in the price of those goods,” Irwin said. “They’re not this continuous rise in the general price level, which is inflation.”

The price impact from further tariffs also depends on factors such as U.S. fiscal and monetary policy that may lift the dollar’s value, trade retaliation that could lower other domestic goods prices, and whether or not importers or exporting firms absorb some of the tariff costs.

TARIFF REVENUE

Trump also has pledged to pay down U.S. debt with tariff revenues. On Tuesday, he promised to create an “External Revenue Service” to collect tariffs, duties and all revenue from foreign sources. Collections from his punitive duties since 2018 suggest a vast increase would be needed to make a dent in U.S. deficits now approaching $2 trillion a year before an expected extension of expiring tax cuts, estimated to add more than $4 trillion in new debt over a decade.

Total (EPA:TTEF) collections from the China, steel, aluminum and solar panel tariffs have totaled $257 billion over seven years, a rounding error amid cumulative deficits of $12.57 trillion during that time. 

The conservative-leaning Tax Foundation estimates that a 10% universal Trump tariff would raise about $1.7 trillion over 10 years, including accounting for a negative impact on economic growth.

This post appeared first on investing.com
Previous Post

Bank of America earnings beat by $0.05, revenue topped estimates

Next Post

Point72’s new AI fund near $1.5 billion after double-digit returns, sources say

Next Post
Point72’s new AI fund near $1.5 billion after double-digit returns, sources say

Point72’s new AI fund near $1.5 billion after double-digit returns, sources say

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
American creating deepfakes targeting Harris works with Russian intel, documents show

American creating deepfakes targeting Harris works with Russian intel, documents show

October 23, 2024
Cadence raises midpoint of 2024 profit forecast on robust demand from chip designers

Cadence raises midpoint of 2024 profit forecast on robust demand from chip designers

October 28, 2024
Israel stocks lower at close of trade; TA 35 down 0.23%

Israel stocks lower at close of trade; TA 35 down 0.23%

October 6, 2024
Takeaways from the start of a Fed rate-cutting cycle

Takeaways from the start of a Fed rate-cutting cycle

October 12, 2024
McDonald’s announces plan to hire 375,000 employees this summer

McDonald’s announces plan to hire 375,000 employees this summer

0
Retailers scramble to move billions in cargo as East Coast dockworkers prepare to strike

Retailers scramble to move billions in cargo as East Coast dockworkers prepare to strike

0
PepsiCo to buy tortilla chip maker Siete Foods for $1.2 billion

PepsiCo to buy tortilla chip maker Siete Foods for $1.2 billion

0
East and Gulf coast ports shut down as thousands of workers go on strike

East and Gulf coast ports shut down as thousands of workers go on strike

0
McDonald’s announces plan to hire 375,000 employees this summer

McDonald’s announces plan to hire 375,000 employees this summer

May 13, 2025
Walgreens doubles down on prescription-filling robots to cut costs, free up pharmacists amid turnaround

Walgreens doubles down on prescription-filling robots to cut costs, free up pharmacists amid turnaround

May 13, 2025
Fox streaming service to be called Fox One, launch before NFL season

Fox streaming service to be called Fox One, launch before NFL season

May 13, 2025
Fortnite applies to launch on Apple’s App Store after Epic Games court win

Fortnite applies to launch on Apple’s App Store after Epic Games court win

May 11, 2025

Recent News

McDonald’s announces plan to hire 375,000 employees this summer

McDonald’s announces plan to hire 375,000 employees this summer

May 13, 2025
Walgreens doubles down on prescription-filling robots to cut costs, free up pharmacists amid turnaround

Walgreens doubles down on prescription-filling robots to cut costs, free up pharmacists amid turnaround

May 13, 2025
Fox streaming service to be called Fox One, launch before NFL season

Fox streaming service to be called Fox One, launch before NFL season

May 13, 2025
Fortnite applies to launch on Apple’s App Store after Epic Games court win

Fortnite applies to launch on Apple’s App Store after Epic Games court win

May 11, 2025

Disclaimer: WallStreetJedi.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively "The Company") do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized financial advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. Any investments recommended here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your investment advisor and after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Copyright © 2025 wallstreetjedi.com | All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Economy
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Investing
  • Stock

Copyright © 2025 wallstreetjedi.com | All Rights Reserved