Donald Trump thinks the world of tariffs. “Tariffs are the greatest thing ever invented,” Trump said in September at a town hall event in Michigan. On another occasion he said “tariff” is the most beautiful word in the English language. Hmm. And he really has had a love affair with tariffs. After all, they mark his entry into national politics. Back in the mid-1980s, his one big gripe was the trade deficit with Japan. Then China became the target, and while president, Trump kept raising tariffs with China in the belief China would bend a knee and surrender. It didn’t, and Biden has been stuck in a tariff war ever since.
Vice President Kamala Harris referred to her opponent’s tariff policy as a “Trump Tax.” She’s right: Several independent studies have found that the new tariffs, if implemented, would raise costs for the average middle-class family anywhere between $1,350 and $3,900 a year. The reason is simple: tariffs are usually passed on to the consumer by the importing company—unless, of course, the company wants to eat the tariff cost. Yet Trump and Vance, either out of pure ignorance or for political gain (or both), insisted that the exporting country pays. Referring to Harris’ claim, Trump said: “She is a liar. She makes up crap … I am going to put tariffs on other countries coming into our country, and that has nothing to do with taxes to us. That is a tax on another country.” In September, he repeated the claim during an interview with Fox News: “It’s not a tax on the middle class. It’s a tax on another country.”
Vance chimed in that when Trump was president and raised tariffs on Chinese goods, “prices went down for American citizens. They went up for the Chinese but they went down for our people.” Totally wrong. In fact, the American Chamber of Commerce in Beijing opposed Trump’s tariffs precisely because importers in the United States (U.S.) would have to pass along higher prices to consumers, making their goods less competitive. But Trump wasn’t listening.
The longer the presidential campaign went on, the more promises Trump made about the wonders of high tariffs cuts. He proposed extending the 2017 tax cuts and eliminating taxes on tips, overtime pay, and Social Security benefits. All that may sound great, but they all mean lost revenue that will have to be made up somehow. He has also said the tariff revenue could pay for a child care initiative. And CNBC reported that he was floating the idea of replacing the federal income tax with tariff revenue. Millions of people may no longer have to pay an income tax, he said. Fantasies.
As CNN reports, “Trump has said that if elected, he would impose tariffs of up to 20 % on every foreign import coming into the U.S., as well as another tariff upward of 60 % on all Chinese imports. He also said he would impose a “100 % tariff on countries that shift away from using the U.S. dollar.” Hence, the Trump tax and the higher living costs for the average family. According to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, “Americans have so far paid more than $242 billion to the U.S. Treasury for tariffs that Trump imposed on imported solar panels, steel and aluminum, and Chinese-made goods.” And that’s with tariffs Trump raised on only 14 % of imports, not the 20-100 % he (along with Project 2025) is now promising.