Berliner Boersenzeitung - What are the costs behind Trump's economic proposals?

EUR -
AED 4.100156
AFN 76.996433
ALL 99.295206
AMD 432.908722
ANG 2.012016
AOA 1035.676157
ARS 1074.292498
AUD 1.63648
AWG 2.009355
AZN 1.897392
BAM 1.956743
BBD 2.254126
BDT 133.413129
BGN 1.955733
BHD 0.420693
BIF 3236.402414
BMD 1.116308
BND 1.442583
BOB 7.71472
BRL 6.059013
BSD 1.116408
BTN 93.311689
BWP 14.757719
BYN 3.653563
BYR 21879.641043
BZD 2.250324
CAD 1.513664
CDF 3204.920923
CHF 0.949967
CLF 0.037559
CLP 1036.380611
CNY 7.86863
CNH 7.868511
COP 4637.122005
CRC 579.26891
CUC 1.116308
CUP 29.582168
CVE 110.318189
CZK 25.06715
DJF 198.800507
DKK 7.459557
DOP 67.011108
DZD 147.754915
EGP 54.152428
ERN 16.744623
ETB 129.551041
FJD 2.456772
FKP 0.850135
GBP 0.838403
GEL 3.047445
GGP 0.850135
GHS 17.551462
GIP 0.850135
GMD 76.4765
GNF 9645.434435
GTQ 8.630161
GYD 233.552605
HKD 8.695075
HNL 27.693856
HRK 7.589792
HTG 147.307724
HUF 393.006985
IDR 16963.084765
ILS 4.216871
IMP 0.850135
INR 93.201633
IQD 1462.472364
IRR 46988.225505
ISK 152.096634
JEP 0.850135
JMD 175.401425
JOD 0.790905
JPY 161.140205
KES 144.014553
KGS 94.036129
KHR 4534.104838
KMF 492.682473
KPW 1004.676762
KRW 1489.344895
KWD 0.340552
KYD 0.930328
KZT 535.256081
LAK 24652.444243
LBP 99974.314844
LKR 340.621176
LRD 223.287656
LSL 19.598998
LTL 3.296168
LVL 0.675243
LYD 5.301414
MAD 10.825419
MDL 19.480869
MGA 5049.298771
MKD 61.638338
MMK 3625.725543
MNT 3793.215269
MOP 8.96152
MRU 44.366397
MUR 51.216167
MVR 17.146767
MWK 1935.681249
MXN 21.635285
MYR 4.702451
MZN 71.276256
NAD 19.59891
NGN 1829.941183
NIO 41.08889
NOK 11.694462
NPR 149.296307
NZD 1.790146
OMR 0.429946
PAB 1.116438
PEN 4.18458
PGK 4.370029
PHP 62.190087
PKR 310.194021
PLN 4.26967
PYG 8709.965346
QAR 4.070262
RON 4.972149
RSD 117.085043
RUB 103.397982
RWF 1504.985168
SAR 4.188949
SBD 9.273102
SCR 14.581201
SDG 671.455616
SEK 11.35262
SGD 1.441684
SHP 0.850135
SLE 25.504632
SLL 23408.419405
SOS 637.996173
SRD 33.718035
STD 23105.326264
SVC 9.768491
SYP 2804.757812
SZL 19.605926
THB 36.727103
TJS 11.867509
TMT 3.907079
TND 3.382831
TOP 2.614505
TRY 38.105265
TTD 7.593593
TWD 35.753458
TZS 3042.742516
UAH 46.143908
UGX 4135.994127
USD 1.116308
UYU 46.131415
UZS 14206.531374
VEF 4043885.158798
VES 41.121191
VND 27489.089831
VUV 132.530354
WST 3.122831
XAF 656.255771
XAG 0.035892
XAU 0.000425
XCD 3.016879
XDR 0.827377
XOF 656.255771
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.439876
ZAR 19.432096
ZMK 10048.106972
ZMW 29.556456
ZWL 359.45079
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    25.02

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    -7.1900

    137.5

    -5.23%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.32

    -0.6%

  • SCS

    -0.3900

    12.92

    -3.02%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    69.55

    +1.04%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    40.8

    -2.01%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    78.38

    -0.66%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    35.04

    -0.43%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.44

    -0.35%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    63.57

    -2.53%

  • RBGPF

    58.8300

    58.83

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.99

    -0.29%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.97

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    32.64

    -0.37%

What are the costs behind Trump's economic proposals?
What are the costs behind Trump's economic proposals? / Photo: Alex Wroblewski - AFP/File

What are the costs behind Trump's economic proposals?

Republican former president Donald Trump once dubbed himself a "Tariff Man" seeking to boost government coffers.

Text size:

As he makes another White House bid in 2024, tariff hikes -- this time on all US imports -- are again on the table.

But analysts estimate the new levies could bring added consumer costs of some $500 billion annually, while other proposals like tax cut extensions could further inflate the national deficit.

What are Trump's key economic policies and their consequences?

- What are his proposals? -

Trump has advocated for at least a 10 percent tariff on imports from all trading partners, describing this as "a ring around the country."

This would hit some $3 billion in goods, at 2023 import levels.

On Chinese goods, Trump floated levies of 60 percent or higher, warning last month: "You screw us and we'll screw you."

The tariff revenues would in turn help to offset extensions to sweeping tax cuts approved in 2017 under his administration's Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), with some provisions due to expire after 2025.

While the act lowered income taxes for many Americans, they have also been criticized for being more beneficial to the wealthy.

At a rally this month, Trump pledged a "middle class, upper class, lower class, business class, big tax cut."

He has vowed to reverse President Joe Biden's electric vehicle subsidies as well, among other moves.

- What is the consumer impact? -

A 10 percent across-the-board tariff and more on China would cost an average American household at least $1,700 in increased taxes each year, according to a report this week from the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE).

The toll "will be nearly five times those caused by the Trump tariff shocks through late 2019, generating additional costs to consumers from this channel alone of about $500 billion per year," it said.

Those new consumer costs translate to at least 1.8 percent of GDP, the nonpartisan Washington-based institute said, also noting the potential negative effects of foreign retaliation and lost competitiveness.

- What is the fiscal hit? -

Extending Trump's tax cuts for the next decade would add $4.6 trillion to the deficit, according to a report this month by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), a nonpartisan federal agency.

CBO's earlier cost estimate for an extension was $3.5 trillion through 2033.

This means policymakers might have to find ways to offset the hit to the deficit, such as by lowering spending.

Renewed trade wars will also "more than offset the benefit from lower taxes," said Oxford Economics in an April analysis.

- How are different groups affected? -

Trump's proposals shift tax burdens "away from the well-off and toward lower-income members of society," said PIIE senior fellows Kimberly Clausing and Mary Lovely, who wrote the report.

Fully extending TCJA provisions would "entail about one percent of GDP in tax cuts, accruing disproportionately to the top end of the income distribution," PIIE estimates.

Tariffs also act as a tax on consumption, and lower-income households spend a much larger share of their income while wealthier households can save more.

"As fiscal policy, the Trump agenda amounts to regressive tax cuts, only partially paid for by regressive tax increases," said the PIIE report.

Consumers could also see inflation rise as much as 0.6 percentage points, said Oxford Economics, if Republicans double down on tax cuts and tariffs, and repeal the clean energy provisions of Biden's landmark Inflation Reduction Act.

The weight of earlier Trump tariffs was borne almost entirely by US importers, according to the International Trade Commission.

- Are there external risks? -

Broad tariff hikes risk retaliation and distrust from US trading partners, experts say.

Those partners could hit back with tariffs of a similar magnitude although China, consistent with its past approach, might retaliate in a "less-than-proportional manner," said Oxford Economics.

Taken together, this would still have a significant hit on trade and US GDP.

Higher import costs are likely to hit incomes and consumption, while retaliatory tariffs will make US industries less competitive, Oxford Economics added.

"At a time when international conflicts are manifold and international collective action problems are substantial, the United States cannot afford to alienate its partners and allies," the PIIE report said.

"In short, the proposed policies come with serious national security risks."

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)