Tariffs Act Like a Tax on US Households, Research Finds

Article

US President Donald Trump has once again defended the use of tariffs as a central economic policy tool, arguing that import duties help the government raise revenue, protect domestic industries, and encourage consumers to buy American-made products. However, economic data and independent studies suggest that the burden of tariffs largely falls on US consumers and businesses, rather than foreign exporters.

The latest dispute follows Trump’s warning that the United States will impose 10 per cent tariffs from February 1, rising to 25 per cent by June 1, on imports from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Finland, unless these countries support his proposal for the US to acquire Greenland. The tariffs would remain in place until what Trump described as a “complete and total purchase” is agreed upon.

Trump has justified the move by calling Greenland “vital to US national security” and citing concerns over European activity in the Arctic region.

Trump’s Case for Tariffs

Trump has consistently argued that tariffs:

increase government revenue,

reduce the US trade deficit,

push consumers toward domestically manufactured goods, and

encourage companies to invest and produce within the United States.

He has framed trade deficits as evidence that the US is being economically disadvantaged by foreign countries and has repeatedly claimed that tariffs can restore manufacturing jobs and industrial capacity.

Rising Costs for Consumers

Evidence from recent years suggests that tariffs tend to raise prices for American consumers. According to the BBC, US inflation rose to 3 per cent in the year ending September, up from 2.4 per cent in April, before easing to 2.7 per cent in November and December.

Several major retailers, including Target, Walmart, and Adidas, have indicated that higher import costs resulting from tariffs are passed on to consumers through price increases.

Industries that rely on global supply chains are particularly affected. In the automobile sector, parts frequently cross US, Mexican, and Canadian borders multiple times during production, meaning tariffs increase costs at several stages of manufacturing.

Who Really Pays?

A study by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy found that around 96 per cent of tariff costs are borne by US buyers, including households and businesses, while only about 4 per cent is absorbed by foreign exporters through lower prices. This makes tariffs function similarly to a consumption tax.

Earlier analyses by institutions such as Goldman Sachs showed that while US firms initially absorbed some tariff costs, these expenses were increasingly passed on to consumers over time.

Various estimates suggest that tariffs have acted like a tax increase of roughly $1,100–$1,500 per household per year, with a US Congressional report estimating the 2025 cost at around $1,200 per family.

Impact on Trade and Jobs

Trump has claimed that tariffs would reduce the US trade deficit. However, during the earlier trade war, the US trade deficit with China widened from about $375 billion in 2017 to $419 billion in 2018, before declining modestly in 2019. Economists note that tariffs often redirect trade flows rather than reducing overall deficits.

Employment data also shows limited benefits. While some protected sectors such as steel and aluminium saw modest job gains, overall manufacturing job growth remained weak. In several industries, higher input costs led to job losses instead of gains.

Research from the Federal Reserve and the International Monetary Fund indicates that tariffs weighed on GDP growth and investment. Estimates cited by The Independent suggest the trade war reduced US economic output by $40–$60 billion annually.

A Mixed Economic Record

While tariffs have provided targeted protection for certain industries, broader data suggests they have increased costs for consumers, strained supply chains, and delivered limited gains in employment and trade balances. Economists widely agree that tariffs alone are unlikely to achieve long-term economic objectives without broader structural reforms.

Short Summary

Donald Trump argues that tariffs boost US revenue, protect domestic industries, and reduce trade deficits. However, studies show that most tariff costs are passed on to American consumers, raising prices, increasing household expenses, and delivering limited gains in manufacturing jobs or trade balances.

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