Tariffs And The Markets

 | Jun 06, 2019 12:27PM ET

Assessing the impact of the series of US tariff changes in 2018 and 2019 is difficult. The tariffs have been revised and updated over time. Indeed, MarketsInsider lists about 27 tariff-related events and announcements between March 2018, when President Trump announced tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from all countries, and May 23, 2019. They have involved different countries and have impacted literally thousands of products. Sometimes tariffs have been imposed without allowing enough time for buyers of the products to arrange new suppliers or to make other supply chain adjustments. Still, it may still be possible to assess the impact of the tariffs based upon work done by independent groups like the Tax Foundation, the Peterson Institute for International Economics, and various Federal Reserve Banks.

Contrary to public opinion, the first round of tariffs on Chinese imports was not focused on consumer goods but rather mainly on intermediate goods and capital goods, which amounted to products worth about $32 billion against which tariffs would be levied. The following graphic shows the breakdown. In the case of these products, the importer paid the tariff and either absorbed the cost, negotiated a lower price from the China supplier, and/or passed the price increase on to the final goods producer as an input cost increase.