Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 3, 2025
White House Lacks Financial Literacy – ‘Tariffs’ Show

Presidential Message on National Financial Literacy Month, 2025 – The White House, Apr 1 2025

The foundation of American economic prosperity is a society empowered with the knowledge and tools to make informed financial decisions to achieve the American Dream. …

I welcome that message.

Teaching financial literacy must start at the top. The members of the Trump administration obviously lack the knowledge and tools to make informed financial decisions.

It is the only possible explanation for how they came up with these numbers:


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China does not have a 67% tariff on U.S. goods (it's 7.3%). The EU does not have a 39% tariff on U.S. goods (it's 5.2%). The numbers are bollocks.

So where do they come from? The official explanation from the U.S. Trade Representative is here. Its baloney:

James Surowiecki @JamesSurowiecki – 0:22 UTC · Apr 3, 2025

Just figured out where these fake tariff rates come from. They didn't actually calculate tariff rates + non-tariff barriers, as they say they did. Instead, for every country, they just took our trade deficit with that country and divided it by the country's exports to us.

So we have a $17.9 billion trade deficit with Indonesia. Its exports to us are $28 billion. $17.9/$28 = 64%, which Trump claims is the tariff rate Indonesia charges us. What extraordinary nonsense this is.

Even given that it's Trump, I cannot believe they said "We'll just divide the trade deficit by imports and tell people that's the tariff rate." And then they decided to set our tariffs by just cutting that totally made-up rate in half! This is so dumb and deceptive.

.. it's actually worse than I thought: in calculating the tariff rate, Trump's people only used the trade deficit in goods. So even though we run a trade surplus in services with the world, those exports don't count as far as Trump is concerned.

The last point is a major one, for China, but especially for the EU :

EU-US trade in goods and services reached an impressive €1.6 trillion in 2023. This means that every day, €4.4 billion worth of goods and services cross the Atlantic between the EU and the US.

The total bilateral trade in goods reached €851 billion in 2023. The EU exported €503 billion of goods to the US market, while importing €347 billion; this resulted in a goods trade surplus of €157 billion for the EU.

Total bilateral trade in services between the EU and the US was worth €746 billion in 2023. The EU exported €319 billion of services to the US, while importing €427 billion from the US; this resulted in a services trade deficit of €109 billion for the EU.

EU-US goods and services trade is balanced: the difference between EU exports to the US and US exports to the EU stood at €48 billion in 2023; the equivalent of just 3% of the total trade between the EU and the US.

Despite that Trump has decreed a 20% on all goods from the EU. The natural countermeasure from the EU will be to put a 20+% tariff on all import of U.S. services.

Trump also decreed a minimum 10% tariff on imports from every country. Products made by the penguins of the uninhabited Heard and McDonald Islands in the Antarctic will now come with a 10% surcharge.


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There is really no economic reasoning behind these numbers.

Arnaud Bertrand @RnaudBertrand – 4:16 AM · Apr 3, 2025

To illustrate just how nonsensically these tariffs were calculated, take the example of Lesotho, one of the poorest countries in Africa with just $2.4 billion in annual GDP, which is being struck with a 50% tariff rate under the Trump plan, the highest rate among all countries on the list.

As a matter of fact Lesotho, as a member of the Southern African Customs Union (SACU), applies the common external tariff structure established by this regional trade bloc.

So since the tariffs charged by these 5 countries on U.S. products are exactly the same, they must all be struck with a 50% tariff rate by the U.S., right? Not at all: South Africa is getting 30%, Namibia 21%, Botswana 37% and Eswatini just 10%, the lowest rate possible among all countries.

Looking at Lesotho specifically, every year the U.S. imports approximately $236 million in goods from Lesotho (primarily diamonds, textiles and apparel) while exporting only about $7 million worth of goods to Lesotho (https://wits.worldbank.org/CountryProfile/en/Country/LSO/Year/2022/TradeFlow/EXPIMP/Partner/by-country).

Why do they export so little? Again this is an extremely poor country where 56.2% of the population lives with less than $3.65 a day (https://databankfiles.worldbank.org/public/…), i.e. $1,300 a year. They simply can't afford U.S. products, no-one is going to buy an iPhone or a Tesla on that sort of income…

The way the tariffs are ACTUALLY calculated appears to be based on a simplistic and economically senseless formula: you take the trade deficit the U.S. has with a country, divide it by that country's exports to the U.S and declare this – falsely – "the tariff they charge on the U.S."

And then as Trump did in his speech last night, you magnanimously declare that you'll only "reciprocate" by charging half that "tariff" on them.

As such, for Lesotho, the calculation goes like this: ($236M – $7M)/$235M = 97%. That's the "tariff" Lesotho is deemed to charge this U.S. and half of that, i.e. roughly 50% is what the U.S. "reciprocates" with.

It's extremely easy to see why this makes no sense at all.

Lesotho has a comparative advantage over the U.S. as it can dig up and sell diamonds. But it lacks the purchasing power to buy U.S. goods and services. The calculations by the Trump administration ignore those basic facts.

No tariffs were by the way introduced against Belarus, Russia and North Korea. This because of sanction, the U.S. has allegedly no trade relation with them. (Other than buying enriched Uranium for its nuclear power stations?)

Did the Trump administration anticipate how this nonsense will explode in its face?

It is Smoot-Hawley writ large.

Comments

I will add further:
The Chinese exporters are, for the most part, making a significant profit.
If there was no profit, China would not have grown as it has.
Yes, Chinese exporters can try to use their market dominance to hold pricing – thus causing price increases in the US by forcing the US consumer to eat the tariffs – but higher prices will also spur competition internally.
Historically, Chinese exporters have chosen to keep market share rather than enable competitors.
This entire situation is dynamic – something which Dr. Michael Hudson does not take into account as he is a ledger economics guy.
Can US producers, with the support of the US government via tariffs and other means, be able to now compete with huge Chinese exporters?
Or will the Chinese exporters absorb a significant amount of the tariffs – at which point hopefully the Treasury surplus will be used to reduce the tax burden on Americans?
I have said before, and say again: the tariffs could be a fantastic way of shifting pain of taxes from the 90% to the top 10%.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 14:03 utc | 101

In the Alon Mizrahi video I linked yesterday, he pointed out that Trump tried to emulate the style of the Declaration of Independence.
That was when America was a colony, now it is a superpower.
Trump has weaponized America’s victimhood as he commits two genocides.
It’s not funny, it’s just sad. The last cosplays of a dying Empire.
What is funny are European and Canadian MAGAs celebrating the destruction of their economies.
Weakness. Not strength, a retreat from a world advancing ahead of them. The same week that China begins public testing of flying taxis, America tariffs penguins.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:04 utc | 102

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 14:03 utc | 102
#########
I think you may have banged your head if you think the 10% will see more pain from taxes.
But then, if people weren’t magical thinkers then Trump would never been re-elected.
The Trump presidency is presidency by Oligarchs. The world’s wealthiest man is working for him.
Bessent and Lutnick are both billionaires.
Hilarious.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:10 utc | 103

Are Americans less capable, less entrepreneurial, less skilled, less privately wealthy than Russians?
Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 13:55 utc | 100

A red herring as the Americans are starting from a the pole position.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 3 2025 14:10 utc | 104

Are Americans less capable, less entrepreneurial, less skilled, less privately wealthy than Russians?
Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 13:55 utc | 100
##########
Compare to the Chinese.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:11 utc | 105

The stock and bond market are mostly dependent on available liquidity (i.e. QE, ‘yield curve control, reverse REPO) which are just various forms of money printing.
One should follow Michael Howell/Crossborder Capital, who talks and tracks a lot of these things. He was warning for a while now that a liquidity event may be coming. Another component of this is also that this year US gov has to roll over a large proportion of its total debt.
Rolling over debt eats up liquidity, and this liquidity is then not available for other things like stock market or other speculative assets.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 14:12 utc | 106

@c1ue | Apr 3 2025 13:55 utc: well-done.
Another aspect of this process I find immediately interesting is the stock market and commercial operators’ response to this.
The tariffs and the resulting dislocations are great political tools to beat Trump and his team politically. This is the golden opportunity the opposition has been waiting for – no doubt all the PR agencies in Washington just got a flood of orders for attack ads, social media insertions, articles about unfair pain and suffering, etc. All the usual outlets, hammer and tongs.
As for the commercial operators – people in a position to re-domesticate foreign operations, or expand domestic ones … how long do you think they’ll stay on the fence? A quarter? A year? That timing will have an impact on Trump’s program. If they sit on the fence too long, the vaunted “re-shoring” won’t show up in the numbers, and that’ll be very troublesome for this experiment.
What do you think they’ll do? Anyone got stories?
I was talking with a relative yesterday, he and I are wondering when to move further into the U.S. stock market. “buy the dip now” was his advice, and my response was “I’m anticipating a tidal wave of adverse news, and I expect that to exert a lot of down-sentiment on the market”.
I think I’ll do some buying in about a month, maybe two. But soon. Either way – Trump prevails or not – the market is going to come back up. What else can they do? Same people are in charge.

Posted by: Tom Pfotzer | Apr 3 2025 14:13 utc | 107

I couldn’t be happier with the tariffs.
After all, I want to see the Empire collapse.
The future is in the East.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:14 utc | 108

The economy before Trump was massively propped up by public spending, employing a sh#t ton of federal employees doing… who knows what, DEI initiatives? The economy was also propped up by millions of illegal immigrants who were given free funny money to spend and rent housing.
Now all these flows are reversed – naturally one expects the economy bubble likewise to pop.
Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 14:02 utc | 101
I’m going to put on my tinfoil hat, also because I know little about pure economics.
So my question:
Is it possible that there’s an intention behind this, an intention in the direction of preparation for the Great Reset?
Because the Americans, with their trillions and trillions of dollars in debt, would probably have an interest in “everything back to zero.”
I’m just putting the puzzle together, because I believe outcomes like the Ukraine threat, the Iran threat, the China threat… and even panic like climate and Corona… are part of “softening” the population in this direction. THEY… must be really fed up… and those who remain are panicking.
As I said… tinfoil hat.
But something tells me this is somehow working like a plan…

Posted by: berthold | Apr 3 2025 14:15 utc | 109

@canuck #91
I don’t know for a first hand fact, but I would not be surprised that the failure of the Utah bill is because it would be sued into oblivion.
The US Constitution grants Congress the sole right to coin money and regulate its value and explicitly prohibits the states from doing the same, to wit:

Article I, Section 8:
To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;
No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.

Utah passing a law forcing acceptance of virtual gold as a method of payment is infringing on Congress’ prerogative. Note this cannot be gold coin – there IS no gold (or silver) coin as legal tender in the US any more.
Once again: just because something has value, does not make it money.
Just because gold used to be used to coin money, does not mean gold is money today.
It can be converted into money just like bitcoin or Beanie babies or whatnot, but it is not actually money any more.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 14:18 utc | 110

Posted by: hopehely | Apr 3 2025 13:32 utc | 93
You are quite off regarding the bank example. According to estimate of the economists USA tariffs will cause a -0,3% of GDP. Not a nice think but nothing devastating.
Meanwhile some analysts are forecasting a possible recession in USA.
As for RF Vs USA you must take in consideration the difference between the economic system of RF and the economic system of USA.
In RF the system is, if not communist a socialist one or one with control from the government/state while in USA it’s full capitalist.
Shurely USA can perform alike or better than RF but the question is who will take the hit.
I guess it will be the working class, not the big money.

Posted by: Mario | Apr 3 2025 14:22 utc | 111

Posted by: berthold | Apr 3 2025 14:15 utc | 110
Biden, Blinken, Nuland et.al. were all WEF. That’s pretty much all you need to know.
Now Trump reversed WEF policies but in turn it created another problem. The economy is crashing because it was inflated in very artificial ways that were never really sustainable. There’s no way out, any where they turn… because they are inside the hole they have been digging for years. Just walls to be seen.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 14:24 utc | 112

India levies a 100% tariff on American made auto’s and trucks.
Canada levies a 200% tariff on American diary products, including ultra filtered homogenized milk and milk products.
Japan levies a 500% tariffs on American produced rice, and a 90% tariff on auto’s and trucks.
South Korea levies a 75% tariff on American made auto’s and trucks.
The list goes on and on. Predatory trading has destroyed American industrial centers in Buffalo, Lackawanna, Detroit, South Chicago, South Bend, Johnstown, Youngstown, Bethlehem, Burns Harbor, Baltimore, Sparrows Point, Dunkirk, Cleveland, and Pitt, etc., etc. get the picture now? Millions of jobs lost across the fruited plain.
US tariffs on these predatory traders are above board and fair.
There is a new non globalist Sheriff in town and he means business……….Canada and Mexico can take a hike….

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 3 2025 14:29 utc | 113

We’ve known for months that this was coming.
Does Trump wag the dog before the midterms if his “ratings” keep falling?.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:32 utc | 114

DJT is saving more cash, there is no new money in the Ukronazi pipeline…….none.
Only old Biden monies from the dementia patient formally in the WH, many billions saved already.
No cash for the folks who brought you the first impeachment trial…….Volo, Yermak and the destestable Vindman brothers…………….

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 3 2025 14:34 utc | 115

Putin special envoy for trade investment copoeration etc is having meetings at the White House
Meanwhile Tim Walz(aftr his signal fiasco)is saying that Trump has noidea of how trade works.M..

Posted by: Jo | Apr 3 2025 14:34 utc | 116

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 14:24 utc | 112
Well, I’ve gotten so old, I’ve experienced things I would have thought impossible at 20 or 25.
We didn’t have cell phones, no navigation, no internet, only black and white TV…we never thought the Soviet Union would collapse; in fact, we were among those who truly worshipped America and dreamed of it.
I’ve experienced two currency losses, meaning conversions, and I’ve been ripped off each time.
What am I trying to say?
Never say never, or what I really had to learn the hard way…
“NEVER believe politics, and if you do…half…doubt the rest.”
P.S.
By the way…keep up the good work.

Posted by: berthold | Apr 3 2025 14:34 utc | 117

Why would this German man want to force the United States to drop its recently imposed tariffs on Germany? Won’t those tariffs hurt the U.S. while helping Germany?
It sounds, from what he says, that he thinks U.S. tariffs will help the U.S. economy, but hurt the German economy. I don’t understand. Everyone tells me tariffs always destroy economies. Doesn’t this inconsequential German man understand that?

Posted by: Nobody Special | Apr 3 2025 14:36 utc | 118

Posted by: calixtus | Apr 3 2025 9:30 utc | 8
Thanks to b for pointing out how this tariff situation has been calculated. I recently bought some very nice sandals from Walmart and noticed that the straps on these came from Cambodia. (I’m always looking for sandals, so these ones, expensive by Walmart pricing, have so far turned out to be a good purchase as the straps are wide – the rest of the product being US made.)
Now perhaps a leather industry in the US might have a go making the same sandals? Would that be a correct interpretation?

Posted by: juliania | Apr 3 2025 14:36 utc | 119

According to estimate of the economists…
Posted by: Mario | Apr 3 2025 14:22 utc | 111

You could just as well consult a blind monkey who makes economic predictions by throwing darts at a chart on the wall, as the track record of blind dart-throwing monkeys is way better than that of any given economic expertute…

Posted by: ThirdWorldDude | Apr 3 2025 14:37 utc | 120

According to the reports mentioned in the first part of this video, b’s description of the accounting method seems to be correct and my rebuttal wrong. Oh well, ‘never mind!’
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nv5ZkxQvsz8

Posted by: Scorpion | Apr 3 2025 14:38 utc | 121

There is a new non globalist Sheriff in town and he means business……….Canada and Mexico can take a hike….
Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 3 2025 14:29 utc | 113

Today’s leader board ==> https://finviz.com/screener.ashx?v=111&f=cap_mega&o=-change
Foreign pharmaceuticals, domestic health services, telecom services and consumer defensive.
Not much domestic manufacturing.
Still, it is amazing that 15% of the market is advancing. We have a long way yet to go.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 3 2025 14:39 utc | 122

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 3 2025 14:29 utc | 113
##########
America’s financial class have wrecked manufacturing. The guys who make their branded ties in China. The Treasury and Commerce secretaries.
The controlled destruction of firms being purchased to heap debt on until they collapse. That is an American thing, not a European thing. Hooters was profitable. It was hollowed out by American finance and now it is dead.
You’ve truly abandoned capitalism if you think pricing was the problem.
America’s education system, stock buybacks instead of investment in R&D, are huge domestic and cultural issues that Trump won’t even touch.
Can’t compete? Blame brown people. 😂😂😂

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:41 utc | 123

unimperator | Apr 3 2025 14:02 utc | 101 “The economy before Trump was massively propped up by public spending … Now all these flows are reversed – naturally one expects the economy bubble likewise to pop.”
Von Mises: “There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”
There is no avoiding the coming deflationary implosion. We hold all of our assets free and clear. The only real issue has always been one of timing. My mistake – along with many others – was underestimating just how far the USA was willing to continue the charade, thereby risking the entire edifice. We thought 2009 GFC was it, but no, we decided adding another $20T+ was the ticket.
Actually, no one actually thought this was a good idea – it was rather, make hay while the sun shines. This is the ultimate failure of all democracies, as the voting power of the lower classes can be used to raid the public treasury via the collusion of political, bureacratic and govt sponsored private companies (banks, MIC, etc) who know full well what they are doing (on both the left and right).
So, here we are, and I would advise everyone to prepare themselves for what’s coming. Thank goD the USA has the 2A; remember, Trump can always legally call out the militia ie every adult American.

Posted by: markw | Apr 3 2025 14:41 utc | 124

DJT is saving more cash
Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 3 2025 14:34 utc | 115

Oh boy you are a special case. The Trump Administration is outspending Biden. On Stilts!
They need to borrows trillions. More.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 3 2025 14:42 utc | 125

A massive decrease in federal discretionary spending was long over due.
The US in over $36T in debt, larger than the US GNP, so a massive reduction was absolutely necessary, including reducing employment by retirement incentives and layoffs the federal civilian workforce.
Removing federal income taxes on Overtime, Tips, and SS benefits will also stimulate the economy by injecting more cash into the hands of citizens, citizens who will spend that cash on American made products………its all good…….
Remember that prior to the implementation of the 1913 federal income tax, tariffs were a huge source of federal revenues.
Reducing the federal income tax and increasing tariffs make excellent sense.
All for the DJT economic agenda………..

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 3 2025 14:45 utc | 126

Down South @11:09 –that Trump was installed for his experience in bankruptcies has crossed my mind as well. Is this too outre?!

Posted by: Ben Trovata | Apr 3 2025 14:48 utc | 127

Posted by: too scents | Apr 3 2025 14:42 utc | 125
###########
They don’t need to borrow more. According to Trump the world is dying to buy Fords.
Remember, this was a pricing problem! Those tricky browns use calculators with smaller buttons. Obviously cheating 😂😂😂

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:49 utc | 128

Posted by: tobias cole | Apr 3 2025 14:29 utc | 113
Trump agreed and signed to Canada’s antidumping dairy quota tariffs in 2019. And he sold it as a big win for American dairy on his own usmca website.
Tell me, was trump lying then or is he lying now?

Posted by: Meh | Apr 3 2025 14:50 utc | 129

Everyone knows that casinos print money.
Trump bankrupted a casino that he owned.
Think about that.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:51 utc | 130

berthold | Apr 3 2025 14:15 utc | 110
I’m going to put on my tinfoil hat, also because I know little about pure economics. Is it possible that there’s an intention behind this?

LOL – ya think? Here’s a bit of advice: discard any cute term or phrase like ‘tinfoil’, ‘conspiracy theorist’, etc. These are terms invented by clever insiders to act as a skirmashing force to foreclose potentional perimeter threats.
Secondly, review the Hubbert curve, Club of Rome, Nixon closing gold window, Kissinger – KSA petrodollar. Then, reconsider the reasons for both GW 1 & 2. Next, think about why the US/EU is supporting Israel; also why Iran is the target. (Hmmm, maybe something to do with suppying China?)
Ultimately, when you realize that you cannot have infinite growth on a finite planet, you’ll understand a couple of major factors: why does Musk keep talking about a colony on Mars? Why does the WEF want to reduce population to 500m? Why is there so much attention no on the Artic? Why is all the tech money in AI & robotics?
If you can pull all of that together, then trivial little matters like the Ukraine conflict come into high focus; just a small regional fight to gain access to the larger Russian prize.

Posted by: markw | Apr 3 2025 14:52 utc | 131

Posted by: markw | Apr 3 2025 14:52 utc | 131
########
The West has always been in a feral scarcity mindset.
Funny since China is approaching a post scarcity society.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:57 utc | 132

Posted by: Scorpion | Apr 3 2025 9:43 utc | 14
Good to see you, Scorpion. On my previous sandal inquiry, I suppose that the Cambodian sandals will go up in price, but as I imagine the leather to be more flexible (possibly water buffalo?) than that available to leather makers in the US, perhaps some sandal makers will still want to carry them. Or we might have available to us sandals from New Zealand at Walmart?
😉

Posted by: juliania | Apr 3 2025 14:57 utc | 133

#2 @Oldengineer Your order was an export order post-Brexit so VAT should not have been charged by the EU entity (actually I think it’s technically ‘charged’, but at a rate of 0%).
Your complaint is with the Greek company and their sloppy accounting, not the EU nor your government.

Posted by: Billb | Apr 3 2025 14:59 utc | 134

Svalbard and Jan Mayen are Norwegian territories. But Jan Mayen has only a volcano and a few meteorologists, lol.
Trump forgot the Norwegian territory Bouvet Island in the South Atlantic. It is so inaccessible that even penguins stay away. But that should not prevent US tariffs?

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 3 2025 15:01 utc | 135

“how services can be exported?”
hopehely | Apr 3 2025 13:32 utc | 93
The US Government’s own Bureau of Economic Analysis website clearly believes it is possible to export services. Not only exported but also imported:
https://www.bea.gov/data/intl-trade-investment/international-services-expanded
Statista…..
https://www.statista.com/statistics/547134/us-service-exports-to-eu-by-type-of-service-2014/
…..provides identification of some of those services which include:
– Insurance
– Finance
– Intellectual Property charges
– Travel (including education)
– Telecoms, computer and information services
– Maintenance & Repair Service
Given that the US has a trade surplus on services with the EU it seems odd that those complaining about the EU surplus on goods are ignoring this. Presumably, this fact not being convenient to the usual exceptionalism, may have some bearing on this, lets go with, oversight.

Posted by: Dave Hansell | Apr 3 2025 15:04 utc | 136

Well, I don’t know much about economics, tariffs, etc.
Back in my day, we learned one thing in economics school…
Tariffs benefit no one; in a healthy economy, they only harm others. A healthy economy would have to be pursued by other countries with cheap, high-quality products.
A country will only resort to tariffs if…
The economy, the companies, the manufacturing, logistics, purchasing, etc., are no longer competitive!
Whereby tariffs only delay the demise of the respective economy, not prevent it.
A country that imposes tariffs must be very sure that its competitors depend on it to generate sales!
Or it must be able to increase domestic demand dramatically, which in turn would only work with higher wages.
Meaning counterproductive for entrepreneurs…
.
P.S.
Now, Snickers, for example, will probably be at least 50% more expensive for Americans, since almost 70% of them are produced in Vietnam. Conversely, Europeans and the Vietnamese’s friends, the Russians, will be pleased. Incidentally, they supply almost all of the raw materials for this product…did you know?

Posted by: Ost Rentner | Apr 3 2025 15:04 utc | 137

Make sure you position yourself well because the Titanic is not far away from the iceberg.
Do not despair, yet.

Posted by: pepe | Apr 3 2025 15:05 utc | 138

Michael Hudson and Richard Wolff discussing Trump tariffs on Dialogue Works.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=594yN8rxIJo

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 15:06 utc | 139

Thanks for the reporting of Trump’s economic neutron bomb b
The shit show continues until it doesn’t.
Those that believe it is possible to model trade and that the data in that model is not dirty are smoking some bad weed.
Trump wants to crash the global economy for his God Of Mammon cult handlers before the BRICS+ folks have their shit together to instantiate an alternative to the global private finance jackboot.
Where Trump’s tariff plan will fail is in the enforcement…..but the attempt to do so will increase the rate of empire and private finance decline.
When is the world going to get to real price discovery instead of magic numbers controlled by the God Of Mammon cult?

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 3 2025 15:10 utc | 140

Feel “Liberatated” from commerce with the rest of humanity? Ha ha ha!

Posted by: lester | Apr 3 2025 15:12 utc | 141

reset… financial collapse… that is what i am thinking…
reading the 140 posts here – lots of weird and crazy ideas that post from b has triggered.. thanks b..

Posted by: james | Apr 3 2025 15:18 utc | 142

Posted by: ThirdWorldDude | Apr 3 2025 14:37 utc | 119
We will see, probably they are better than the Trump team.

Posted by: Mario | Apr 3 2025 15:19 utc | 143

@ meh #128
Ooohh, I know, I know…he lies ALL the time!

Posted by: motorslug | Apr 3 2025 15:19 utc | 144

Posted by: Ost Rentner | Apr 3 2025 15:04 utc | 136
I really don’t know if you are correct, Ost, but won’t that company return to the US (where I presume it originally started) and make the product here? That mightn’t be good for Vietnamese industry, but it won’t happen right away as factories need to be built, so hard times I guess as we maybe eat less Snickers, but that might be good for US consumers dealing with health problems.
Just asking. I am remembering the job losses as companies relocated overseas. That’s admittedly an expensive business initially for the companies, but they seem to have survived. I saw that Michael Hudson and Richard Wolff at Dialogue Works have negative opinions on the sudden shock to the stock market, but maybe this is the initial hard landing comparative to what happened in Russia. Hopefully better days are ahead; but I really don’t know that. Let’s wait and see.

Posted by: juliania | Apr 3 2025 15:22 utc | 145

This extreme gaslighting reinforces my original theory about what the Trump Admin is up to.
These “tariffs” will induce a prolonged global recession, reducing asset prices everywhere.
The Fed/Treasury duopoly will reduce rates and print. The new US Financial oligarchy, Blackrock, Vanguard, etc., will use the newly printed dollars to purchase strategic infrastructure assets around the globe at deep discounts.

Posted by: Fool Me Twice | Apr 3 2025 15:22 utc | 146

@ M.J. | Apr 3 2025 12:19 utc | 63
I imported a new guitar from the US to Spain where I currently live.
The price of the guitar was 1349 $ that was around 1200 € at that point of time, shipping was 120 $.
I had to pay tariff, VAT and handling fees and ended up paying around 1650 €. Wouldn’t have bought it, if I’d known that before.
That’s not far away from what Trump claims.
And don’t tell me, VAT is no tariff, it’s the state ripping me off.
——-
Oh, FFS. It’s NOT a tariff. Tariffs are there to punish imports. The same 21% tax is charged on a guitar made in Spain. It’s usually included in the advertised price in Europe but that doesn’t mean it’s not there. It should be shown on the receipt. If an American buys a guitar in Spain they can get the 21% tax rebated by filling out some forms at the airport, wherever the guitar is made.
Yes, as you’ve found, the US product is NOT competitively priced with other products when compared on a level playing field, that’s kind of the point and probably why you can’t buy it in your local store without having to import it and deal with the extra costs of a one-off shipment (courier, customs clearance, disbursement charges).
Incidentally if you’d had that US guitar shipped to (say) New York and brought it in by hand you’d have had to pay the ~8% US sales tax and there would be no practical way to get that back. And then an additional 21% upon arrival since it is more than EUR 430.
If you have a problem with Spanish VAT rates then you should talk to your elected representatives and tell them what services the government provides that you’d like them to take a chainsaw to. Maybe health care, public transit, or roads?

Posted by: Billb | Apr 3 2025 15:24 utc | 147

WMG | Apr 3 2025 12:25 utc | 66–
Except for the top 10%. This is Class War as Wolff described in his explanation of Trumpism video he published yesterday. Trumponomics is Make America’s Gini Astronomical.

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 3 2025 15:25 utc | 148

Notice gold price has rebounded nicely, continuing its outperformance of the stock market. Several financial analysts point out gold may be outperforming the equity markets for many years to come.
https://x.com/NorthstarCharts/status/1907405957350498466

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 15:25 utc | 149

Mario | Apr 3 2025 14:22 utc | 110–
The Outlaw US Empire as presently organized will continue its decline against Russia and China whose political-economies are both grounded on massive state investment to fuel growth, not on the massive reaping of rents, which is the US model. Last night I linked to an excellent analysis of China’s economic system that when read one can see where Russia has mimicked it provided one has knowledge of what Russia’s doing, “China’s Economic Model Revisited. Today, I’ll be publishing the translation of the report given to Putin by General Director of the Russian Export Center Veronika Nikishina that shows outstanding performance despite all the impediments.

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 3 2025 15:35 utc | 150

“Trump wants to crash the global economy for his God Of Mammon cult handlers before the BRICS+ folks have their shit together to instantiate an alternative to the global private finance jackboot.”
Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 3 2025 15:10 utc | 139
No, I believe Trump realizes (but would never, ever admit it) that the Dollar is in its twilight as the world’s reserve currency as BRICS will designate the new reserve currency.
So he’s trying to have Fortress Western Hemisphere (take back the Panama canal, South America is pretty much in the bag already, add Latin America, Canada and Greenland and isolate from the rest of the world.
Getting the whole world pissed at him actually works to his hemispheric advantage.

Posted by: canuck | Apr 3 2025 15:35 utc | 151

The EU has so many tariffs, surcharges and VATs that the tariff numbers aren’t representative..As Martin Armstrong shows, some German cars cost only 1/3 as much in America as they do in Austria, a short distance from where they are manufactured…The American market for luxury cars is crucial to EU manufacturers…Trump is bringing jobs back to the US, or forcing Europe and the UK to lower their taxes, tariffs etc on American products…

Posted by: pyrrhus | Apr 3 2025 15:36 utc | 152

it’s always a class war, and if anyone in the lower class – most of us here – can’t see who class trump is working for – then there is no help talking to any of them..

Posted by: james | Apr 3 2025 15:37 utc | 153

I see that israel is on the list for 33%, with a reciprocal 17%. Does that include the genocide armaments and population surveillance/slavery trade too, or is that still compliments of the taxpayers?

Posted by: motorslug | Apr 3 2025 15:37 utc | 154

who – what

Posted by: james | Apr 3 2025 15:37 utc | 155

> “ Do you realize that the Fed CANNOT bid or buy in the Primary market-only in the secondary bond market.”
Good to point out, though it’s a distinction of no practical consequence. Yes?
The banks are part of the regime. They buy, skim, and sell to the Fed. If they were ever concerned with being left with unsellable inventory, they know they’ll be bailed out.

Posted by: I forgot | Apr 3 2025 15:39 utc | 156

Everyone knows that casinos print money.
Trump bankrupted a casino that he owned.
Think about that.
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 14:51 utc | 129
But Trump was very clever about b going bankrupt.
He had his father, Fred trump buy $5MM worth of casino chips from Donald’s casino but he didn’t play.
When the bankruptcy occurred all the chips are the first asset that must be paid out-so Trump raised $5MM to fight for his other assets.
When the bank, who had the boat as security, went after him for not paying insurance on his $300 MM yacht Trump refused. His accountant asked why: Trump replied, “The bank will have to pay the insurance to protect their security” And they did.
Trump is exactly what the bankrupt USA needs a creative guy to get them out of the mess-but your simplistic, biased ideas about him are but Zany Leftist Cult Ignorant Wailings

Posted by: canuck | Apr 3 2025 15:43 utc | 158

Trump’s strategy will work, at least partially. UK and EU would probably be the first ones come back crawling, agreeing to lower their taxes and tariffs for US products.
South Korea and Japan may – albeit they have agreed counter-measures together with China. I expect Trump will announce a series of victories over coming weeks as these countries deteriorate and find themselves in fatal financial danger.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 15:45 utc | 159

Walmart has been asking Chinese suppliers to help it with the tariffs to keep purchasing from China. I suspect this was a Trump strategy all along.
The Chinese have solidarity, and the answer is no and will likely stay no.
Don’t be surprised if Walmart is the first huge American casualty of this conflict next year. Their entire business model is predicated on selling cheap Chinese goods marked up. The firm may remain but the stock price will probably get hammered.
Does the billionaire class shop at Walmart? Nope.
It’s those lower-class Americans. The “useless eaters”. The Trump voters. Turkeys that voted for Thanksgiving.
Also, the word has come down from the Chinese government. All firms have to stop any direct investment in America.
If Iran wipes out the Middle East kingdoms as a consequence of American collaboration in Iranicide, then I have no idea where America will get investment from.
I wonder if any Trump supporters have thought to consider that the answer to America being deindustrialized is supposedly to deindustrialize others. Zero-sum thinking, a race to the bottom.
Only the weakest countries and firms will move to America under threat, particularly that once moved, the Americans may nationalize the business and take it away for Blackrock. No major country or its firms will consider doing so.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 15:46 utc | 160

I recently bought some very nice sandals from Walmart
Posted by: juliania | Apr 3 2025 14:36 utc | 118

Have you considered buying from AliExpress? The selection is much broader, and the prices eliminate the middleman.
I find buy from Ali to be a fun adventure.

Posted by: too scents | Apr 3 2025 15:50 utc | 161

However, the blessing of a being a reserve currency also has bred into it a curse; the Sovereign country hosting, issuing its reserve currency MUST run fiscal deficits in order for other Sovereigns to use the reserve currency.
Herein lies the US problem today.
Posted by: canuck | Apr 3 2025 12:41 utc | 72
Excellent analysis. Strong dollar is what stands against introoduction of some sort of global digital currency. So dollar reserve status got to go

Posted by: Michael J | Apr 3 2025 15:51 utc | 162

Posted by: canuck | Apr 3 2025 15:43 utc | 157
############
The point is that Trump bankrupted a sure-thing business, not that he manipulated things to avoid accountability.
One can do that as an individual, not as a nation. As I wrote yesterday, competence in one domain isn’t competence in most domains.
A guy who can dodge US bankruptcy law creatively isn’t necessarily the right guy to manage the US economy.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 15:56 utc | 163

MAGA will believe all of Trump’s claims.

Posted by: Keme | Apr 3 2025 15:56 utc | 164

Except for the top 10%. This is Class War as Wolff described in his explanation of Trumpism video he published yesterday. Trumponomics is Make America’s Gini Astronomical.
Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 3 2025 15:25 utc | 147
Thank you, karlof1. I understand that many who comment here have investments in the stock market. So this is a shock to the 10% as you are saying, and to investors in general. But because of the way that tranches and pensions and the like were all under discussion when mortgages became ‘investment’ items under Obama, this latest shock will affect the entire structure of the economy, will it not? So all of us will have some repercussions. I am just wondering if Trump’s manner of making adjustments after the fact of the initial hard landing will pull back from the precipice on individual negotiations. This seems like the ‘hard landing’ we all were expecting to happen; hopefully some softening will follow. (I know, I’m always too hopeful; it’s how I be. And I am an ignoramus on economic matters, no matter how hard I try to understand.)
I don’t see it as racially motivated, as Richard wolff was suggesting rather strongly at the end of the latest Nima video. I don’t see that as part of Trump’s character, whatever other faults he has.

Posted by: juliania | Apr 3 2025 15:58 utc | 165

Chinese factories, shipping companies and suppliers are telling US retail companies that they are not going to pay for tariffs.
https://x.com/luo_yuehan/status/1907466767397765185
Take a Look at the US retail ETF $XRT today.
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/XRT/

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 15:59 utc | 166

@ canuck #157
No matter how much perfume you put on an orange pig, it’s still a pig.
A – yes, the bank may have put the insurance on a boat (forced place) but they charge that back to the owner (and at much higher rates, guaranteed issue vs underwritten)
B – just because a grifter takes advantage of bankruptcy laws (that were written by grifters to benefit themselves) doesn’t make him intelligent
Creative, yes but so was Charles Manson

Posted by: motorslug | Apr 3 2025 16:01 utc | 167

Norfolk Island was a lot smaller than I thought (34.6 square km) but the 2188 (in 2021) inhabitants has a winery and made and exported medical cannabis at some point before it was shut down (maybe it has been allowed again?).
Either way it is one US trade deficit mystery less! 😀

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Apr 3 2025 16:13 utc | 168

Posted by: Ciaran | Apr 3 2025 12:28 utc | 66
“If the primary purpose of the tariffs is to reduce US Federal deficits and total debt, the tariffs are best viewed as a major retrenchment in US empire building and acceptance of the inevitable loss of economic hegemony, and as a declaration of economic war primarily against Europe and China”
Yes Ciaran, I think that you are on the right track.
I see the purpose of the tariffs as three-fold.
1. It is a disguised value added tax (but only on foreign value added).
They need the tax to bring down the federal deficit, which so far this year is running at more than 10% of GDP.
2. It is an attempt to staunch the flow of dollars overseas.
The current account deficit, that is running at about $1.2 trillion annually, is threatening to bankrupt the U.S. Shrinking the current account deficit will improve the money supply within the U.S. and reduce the pressure on interest rates. It will also, over the longer term, reduce the role of the U.S. dollar in international trade and finance.
3. It is an attempt to re-orient the U.S. economy away from the financial and services economy, which it has become since 1980, back to a manufacturing based economy.
Shifting the economy to a financial and services economy has resulted in the current account deficits noted above. It has destroyed the middle class, redistributing wealth to the elites (global elites?). It has destroyed the income tax system as a source of revenue – the rich don’t pay taxes. It has also forced the expansion of government services (driving the fiscal deficits) in order to make up for the loss of economic activity of the middle class. Returning the U.S. to a production based economy and reversing these trends is essential for the U.S. to return to economic health.
The winners from this policy will be the American middle and lower classes, and the U.S. itself. The losers will be the ‘Global Elites’ whose profits will shrink and whose financial services will no longer be needed. The countries being hit by these tariffs will suffer collateral damage in the short term, but will eventually reorient their economies and be none the worse for wear.
Given the above, I don’t think that these policies will be changed as long as Donald Trump, or his followers, remain in power.

Posted by: dh-mtl | Apr 3 2025 16:13 utc | 169

@LoveDonbass #103
I think you are a troll with nothing to offer, so we are even.
Yet another post with nothing to say except … nothing.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 16:14 utc | 170

@too scents #104
America as a nation is wealthy; most Americans are not.
As you are a PMC, you have no idea of what most Americans lives are like.
PMCs are not who voted for Trump in a landslide.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 16:16 utc | 171

@ Fool Me Twice | Apr 3 2025 15:22 utc | 145
“These “tariffs” will induce a prolonged global recession, reducing asset prices everywhere.
The Fed/Treasury duopoly will reduce rates and print. The new US Financial oligarchy, Blackrock, Vanguard, etc., will use the newly printed dollars to purchase strategic infrastructure assets around the globe at deep discounts.”

Yes. We’re seeing that it’s becoming one integrated assimilation entity with things like the proposed Ports and TikTok takeovers. Devaluation of the dollar may figure into it too. Reduce rates AFTER squeezing as many concessions as possible and allowing fairly high inflation reducing the real value of the debt. Sure it will take more dollars to grab those assets, but they’ll return more dollars in rent and it’s only blips in a computer anyway.
The best defense against this is probably for countries to continue to reduce trade barriers between them (and internally, where applicable), add sensible flat (maybe 10-20%) and targeted (no upper limit) tariffs to US imports (including services). If the US wants to blow up free trade and produce at high cost internally for local consumption only, that’s fine, the world will adjust. And legally prevent takeover of vital assets, subjecting all such takeovers to review on national security grounds (taking into account the actions of the current US regime when derisking). And (very important) to resist joining in with US tariffs on third countries or giving the US a veto over free trade deals with others, if they value their sovereignty at all. The EU and Canada/Mexico need to pay heed.
Before the current administration there were many earnest warnings about “Chinese economic coercion” and “derisking” with respect to China’s trade, which had the effect of increasing US leverage for the current economic coercion. It’s almost as if this disruption has been plotted for some time. Steady as she goes.

Posted by: Billb | Apr 3 2025 16:17 utc | 172

@Tom Pfotzer #107
The stock market, the mainstream media, the lobbying orgs – none of these have anything whatsoever to do with most Americans’ lives.
Keep in mind that the only reason the GFC did affect Americans was not because of the stock market – it was because the banks froze up, and then the subsequent bailouts went entirely to the banksters and banks. And that is even ignoring just how much of the overall stock markets’ caps are from bullshit like AI.
If you want to buy the dip thinking there will be a “Fed Put” after Trump leaves office – good luck with that.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 16:21 utc | 173

@berthold #109
The problem with nonsense theories like the “Great Reset” is this Judeo-Christian notion that someone or someones have full control over everything.
The reality is more like arrogant, drunken with power fools blundering about and smashing into each other.
There are also other reasons: the power and wealth of the powers that be is based precisely on the existing structure.
Why again would they want to reset it?
Only those who are not winning, want to flip the board and start over.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 16:24 utc | 174

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Apr 3 2025 15:46 utc | 160
> Don’t be surprised if Walmart is the first huge American casualty of this conflict next year.
> Their entire business model is predicated on selling cheap Chinese goods marked up.
That would be Dollar Store not Walmart. Walmart has stuff from all over the world. China included of course, but not as much as you think.
> Does the billionaire class shop at Walmart? Nope.
> It’s those lower-class Americans. The “useless eaters”. The Trump voters. Turkeys that voted for Thanksgiving.
I have no c1ue where balloonairs shop, but I do shop at Walmart. It is great. San Pellegrino mineral water (import from Italy, not from China) is the same as in London Drugs, just 2x cheaper.

Posted by: hopehely | Apr 3 2025 16:28 utc | 175

@Ost Rentner #137
Incorrect.
Aspiring nations have always used tariffs as a principal platform to mercantilize.
The only difference between that mercantilism, and what Trump is trying to do, is that he is trying to reindustrialize.
Nobody credible argues that tariffs should not be an integral part of reindustrialization.
The only arguments are how the tariffs are implemented and what else must be done.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 16:29 utc | 176

Republicans Divided📝
Trump’s trade war may undermine unity of Republicans in Congress
Donald Trump’s decision to impose tariffs on imports to the US is causing an outcry not only around the world – it will shake up the United States itself first and foremost. Trump destroyed a century-old trade policy of the country in a single day and in America, of course, there will be forces that will not just let this go.
🖍This is not even about the Democrats – it would be shortsighted to speculate about party tensions. The White House has angered financial heavyweights, whose interests are also represented by some Republicans. Yesterday, they already expressed their protest to Trump in the Senate, voting (51 against 48) for a resolution to cancel the 25% tariffs against Canada.
🚩It should be noted that the document has no legal force – it will not be submitted for consideration to the House of Representatives and only expresses the position of the Senate on the tariff issues. Nevertheless, this is a very unpleasant news for the president – Senators Rand Paul, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski and Mitch McConnell joined the Democrats in the vote.
📌Despite the fact that the outgoing McConnell, who is in his last year in the Senate, is an old opponent of Trump, his vote partly expresses the position of moderate Republicans who until now have not rebelled, fearing for their political careers.
❗️However, lobbyists may soon ask “their” congressmen to start resisting the president. In this case, the Republicans will lose the unity in Congress that is so important to them, which will become a breath of fresh air for their political opponents.
#USA
⭐️@rybar in collaboration with @usaperiodical

Posted by: berthold | Apr 3 2025 16:29 utc | 177

In double super support of

Michael Hudson and Richard Wolff discussing Trump tariffs on Dialogue Works.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=594yN8rxIJo
Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 15:06 utc | 139

I just finished watching it and will be sending the link out to many.
Yes to class war attribution which is what many of us have been writing about here since the beginning….we live in a top/bottom world made to look left/right.
It is now a civilization war about the core support of the Western God Of Mammon cult…..global private finance as a jackboot instead of like China’s finance as a public utility clash.
I know which one I want to win.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 3 2025 16:30 utc | 178

In Beijing 10 years ago I spoke with a Dutch import broker about the cost of importing anything to China.
He was almost laughing as he described the paperwork and bribes required. He knew the process. It is corruption on steroids. Complaining about these tariffs does not show maturity.

Posted by: Deplorable Dave | Apr 3 2025 16:30 utc | 179

@canuck #158
That dumbfuck LoveDonbass doesn’t know shit – and his casino bankrupcty statement is only the latest.
Casinos go bankrupt all the time.
Retailer casino goes bankrupt in 2024
Revel Casino files for second bankruptcy
Diamondjacks casino goes bankrupt
Pretty much all of Atlantic city casinos are perpetually on the edge of bankruptcy – notably I think that’s where Trump’s bankrupt casino is.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 16:35 utc | 180

@ canuck | Apr 3 2025 15:43 utc | 158
“ Trump is exactly what the bankrupt USA needs a creative guy to get them out of the mess-but your simplistic, biased ideas about him are but Zany Leftist Cult Ignorant Wailings”
No need to claim Trump critics here have TDS or adjacent ills. It’s not true and not appreciated. You could’ve simply stated your case, with which I agree.
The “bankruptcy” smears are silly. So was all the lawfare “against” him. …. I say this and dont even like him.

Posted by: I forgot | Apr 3 2025 16:41 utc | 181

Nobody credible argues that tariffs should not be an integral part of reindustrialization.
The only arguments are how the tariffs are implemented and what else must be done.
Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 16:29 utc | 176
But that doesn’t change the fact that American industry has missed the boat on the major industrial countries, especially when it comes to automation, logistics, and prices.
You don’t need specialists for that, you just need common sense and observation skills…
For example, I can’t think of a single product that I would miss on European shelves if America didn’t exist…
“Hamburgers and MCs excluded.”
But when I walk through American supermarkets, I find hundreds of products from the “Old” World or Mexico, etc.
Services are the same…for example, insurance. Uh, which American insurance company in Germany would you know, for example?
At American bases, for example, Rammstein, who serves the service needs…Americans perhaps?
My son has lived in America for about 15 years…he confirms that no matter what, no matter where, a product with “Made in the USA” is available—you have to really search for it.
And without America’s import restrictions on certain food products, the American market would be even more dependent on foreign markets.

Posted by: Beobachter | Apr 3 2025 16:46 utc | 182

Julianna,
The Tariff Excitement is a side show to the main event. The main event is the looming insolvency of Federal Gov’t in 2027, if Trump is unable to balance budget by 2026. This insolvency is likely to result in a 50% or more devaluation of the dollar. Meaning Joe-Six packs’ purchasing power get cut in half. ditto for retirees living on social security.
Soooo – buckle down and start prepping for hard times. Make sure you are on good terms with the Major Domo so you get a fair share of water for your plants.

Posted by: Exile | Apr 3 2025 16:49 utc | 183

Last night I linked to an excellent analysis of China’s economic system that when read one can see where Russia has mimicked it provided one has knowledge of what Russia’s doing, “China’s Economic Model Revisited. Today, I’ll be publishing the translation of the report given to Putin by General Director of the Russian Export Center Veronika Nikishina that shows outstanding performance despite all the impediments.
Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 3 2025 15:35 utc | 150
Thank you, karlof1 – I hadn’t seen this earlier. Very helpful!

Posted by: juliania | Apr 3 2025 16:52 utc | 184

A few on here seem to think there’s some grand plan with tariffs, other than childish temper tantrums.
If the real goal is to ‘reinvigorate’ US industrialization, slashing the war budget by 70%, ending zionazi support and nationalizing the defense industry along with depression-style New Deal on steroids would accomplish that goal, no need for tariffs.

Posted by: motorslug | Apr 3 2025 16:52 utc | 185

The idea of casinos actually genuinely going bankrupt seems a little bit …credulous? Instead maybe some scheme of some kind, maybe an easy way to cover tracks and sell cheaply to the right buyer, stuff like that? Letting stuff run down into the ground with as much debt and insolvency (maybe even jail time) as possible and then “someone else”/a new Mr. Clean etc. rebuilding on the cheap for the next go-around?
Unless they are unable to attract “customers”, but that should be dead easy in the US of all places.
Artificial luck is seriously profitable.
Back on topic it’s the same with Trump-and-co (or any of the others like Biden) and their wild gyrations; I would be shocked if they aren’t milking the upset and the inside knowledge for as much as they can (good luck detecting or tracing any of it, ever).

Posted by: Sunny Runny Burger | Apr 3 2025 16:54 utc | 186

Addendum
American patriotism quickly stops at profits and dividends…
If more profit can be made with products manufactured abroad, the Americans will ditch their American companies and manufacturers… What does the affected manufacturer do then? Do they buy their products abroad or simply have them manufactured there? The American company will be closed down or still exist on paper…
Just like many companies produce in America ONLY on paper… when in reality, everything happens abroad…
These bubbles are now bursting. Russia had to learn this very quickly and was successful in doing so… because some things can be ordered in Russia regardless of whether profits are generated… in the USA, probably not. The advantage of a dictatorship

Posted by: Beobachter | Apr 3 2025 16:55 utc | 187

Posted by: Beobachter | Apr 3 2025 16:46 utc | 182
> At American bases, for example, Rammstein, who serves the service needs…Americans perhaps?
Rammstein is not an American base but a German rock band.

Posted by: hopehely | Apr 3 2025 16:55 utc | 189

in QE the Fed is certainly diluting
Posted by: canuck | Apr 3 2025 11:51 utc | 57

As I posted @24
But wait! There is more.
Price discovery is just getting started.
Posted by: too scents | Apr 3 2025 11:59 utc | 59
There is no longer price discovery in any amerikan markit since
FASB 157 was suspended back in 2007-9

Posted by: Ggersh | Apr 3 2025 16:57 utc | 190

The Tariff Excitement is a side show to the main event. The main event is the looming insolvency of Federal Gov’t in 2027, if Trump is unable to balance budget by 2026. This insolvency is likely to result in a 50% or more devaluation of the dollar. Meaning Joe-Six packs’ purchasing power get cut in half. ditto for retirees living on social security.
Soooo – buckle down and start prepping for hard times. Make sure you are on good terms with the Major Domo so you get a fair share of water for your plants.
Posted by: Exile | Apr 3 2025 16:49 utc | 183
Have you ever paid attention to the euro’s relationship to the dollar?
Or the ruble?
But the euro will pay dearly for all this…because it is too closely tied to the dollar.
And…the stronger euro is driving the indebted EU states into ruin.

Posted by: berthold | Apr 3 2025 16:59 utc | 191

Judging by the crying, whining and screaming coming out the European Commission and president Macron, the EU is almost immediately at a breaking point after tariffs started.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 16:59 utc | 192

Rammstein is not an American base but a German rock band.
Posted by: hopehely | Apr 3 2025 16:55 utc | 189
You’re right…but you’re a nutcase.

Posted by: Beobachter | Apr 3 2025 17:00 utc | 193

Posted by: Ggersh | Apr 3 2025 16:57 utc | 190
There is always price discovery, it’s just that its obfuscated beyond the money dilution. As the separations from the mean get wider, the reversions to the mean get more aggressive as well. Everything is working as it should, it’s just obfuscated for lengthened periods of time.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 3 2025 17:02 utc | 194

@Beobachter #182
Your argument is that American factories did not improve their productivity as Chinese ones did.
The problem with this argument is that it presumes parity between American and Chinese factories – there is none. Many American factories were literally moved to China in the late 80s, 90s and early 00s.
Would those factories have driven improvements in productivity had they stayed in the US?
We will never know.
What we do know is that production of the things Americans use is increasingly not in the United States, meaning the factories are not employing American workers, are not buying from American (as well as global) supply chains; these workers are not supporting restaurants and malls and grocery stores and not paying taxes, etc etc.
History is very clear: industrialization CAN occur even if you have no money, no technology and no significant natural resources because China did it.
The US has all 3.
Execution and structural incentives are what is missing.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 17:03 utc | 195

@motorslug #185
No, it would not.
Doing the things you outline would fix the federal spending deficit but would do absolutely nothing about the existing debt to GDP ratio or the massive trade deficit or lack of real personal income growth.
Economic growth is the only way to resolve these other issues – and reindustrialization is the obvious way to do it.

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 17:05 utc | 196

Excellent article by our host, especially the useful link to the Reciprocal Trade Calculations! It is distinctly anti-Trumpery, which is why there is so much pushback from the Trump cultists, either directly or by far-fetched hypotheticals supposedly explaining the real strategy and how it’s actually smart, if not anti-imperialist, pro-worker, etc. Citing Surowiecki’s point about trade in services is particularly commendable.

Tariffs work through direct reductions of imports.

This is the third sentence from the executive summary…and it is wrong. Import quotas/restrictions (which are very much a thing by the way) are direct. A sales tax on imports (which is what tariffs are) are indirect. Starting with such BS is not an accident I think. And falsely framing the issues as solely trade deficits in goods while ignoring services is false framing, a deceit, also intended I believe.

The failure of trade deficits to balance has many causes, with tariff and non-tariff economic fundamentals as major contributors. Regulatory barriers to American products, environmental reviews, differences in consumption tax rates, compliance hurdles and costs, currency manipulation and undervaluation all serve to deter American goods and keep trade balances distorted.

The key question is, what is the relative importance of each? If non-tariff economic fundamentals—such as the relative productivity and quality of American goods!—are more important, the whole scheme of tariffs falls to pieces. It just becomes economic warfare, which I insist yet again is warfare. Worse, it is not clear how tariffs, reciprocal or not, can achieve the alleged goals! How precisely does raising the US sales tax on imports (aka tariffs) makes a VAT less onerous on American goods that simply cost more due to productivity differences and the relative price of US labor? As our host says, there is no reasoning here.

…let m_i>0 represent total imports from country i, and let x_i>0 represent total exports.

I think there is a little deceit practiced here by putting the subscript i on x, total exports. As Suroviecki, Bertrand and our host have noted, total exports are US exports to country i, not the total exports from country i to the rest of the world. In my opinion, a proper symbology, meant to clarify instead of prejudice, would be x US>0.

Recent evidence suggests the elasticity is near 2 in the long run (Boehm et al., 2023), but estimates of the elasticity vary. To be conservative, studies that find higher elasticities near 3-4 (e.g., Broda and Weinstein 2006; Simonovska and Waugh 2014; Soderbery 2018) were drawn on. The elasticity of import prices with respect to tariffs, φ, is 0.25. The recent experience with U.S. tariffs on China has demonstrated that tariff passthrough to retail prices was low (Cavallo et al, 2021).

[The elasticity of import demand refers to an estimate of how much sales drop as prices on imports rise. My judgment is that you are not being conservative in using older data from 2006 and 2014 and 2018, you are cherry picking. The Cavallo study on pass through is cited. [Tariff passthrough is the ability of firms to set their prices so that any sales taxes, in this case tariffs, are simply added on and essentially the firm is merely a tax collector.] Given that actual price setting by firms is generally illegal it is not surpsising the recen Callo study cited finds that to be generally low. It is notable that this doesn’t even cite any figures from it. I think it obvious that the 0.25 was cherry picked to cancel out the 4. So yes, the formula basically divides the difference in US exports to and from country i by the total imports from country i, just as charged.

Assuming that offsetting exchange rate and general equilibrium effects are small enough to be ignored…

That is, assuming nothing else in the rest of foreign trade changes. So far as I can see, given that reciprocal tariffs on this scale, given the importance of US economy and the dollar to world trade (still very important despite a relative decline in percentage globally,) this is a gigantic presumption wished away. Again, there is no economic reasoning here, just as our host charged.

Standard deviations range from 20.5 to 31.8 percentage points.

Standard deviation is a quantitative measure of how much deviation individual data points from the mean there is. To my eyes, such large SDs implies their own data rules against a blanket policy like so-called reciprocal tariffs having predictable effects. One size does not fit all. Individuals in the comments have already noticed some of the inevitable oddities resulting from such a shotgun approach. Sometimes a scalpel is better than an axe.
In one sense, this comment is somewhat repetitious from our host’s excellent post. But I felt it was worthwhile to highlight the possibility that our host’s invocation of Hanlon’s Razor (the principle that it is always simpler to attribute actions to stupidity or error rather than malice) is an internet thing, meaning not a thing at all. That the Trumpery is not financial illiteracy but really is simply, lying.

Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 3 2025 17:10 utc | 197

History is very clear: industrialization CAN occur even if you have no money, no technology and no significant natural resources because China did it.
The US has all 3.
Execution and structural incentives are what is missing.
Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 17:03 utc | 195
Right!
The same thing is happening in Europe here, Germany…with China.
.
The euro has risen in the last 12 hours, which also means that the interest burden on debt is rising, almost…wrong. ALL EU states are actually insolvent; the rising euro will finish these countries off.
Germany, which just incurred 1 trillion in new debt…according to yesterday’s euro exchange rate, had to pay 35 billion in interest per year starting in 2026…
Now, 24 hours later, with the new euro exchange rate, that would already be 42 billion in interest per year…
Trump, who has certain problems with the EU in connection with Ukraine!!!
Seems to have planned for that…
Two or five more missiles at Yemen and the Houthis will close the Red Sea…and Europe will be at the end of its energy needs, from coal, etc.
Add to that the odd US LNG tanker diverted, and Europe will be in the dark, begging Putin to reopen N2…oh yeah, N2 might also belong to Trump by then (=

Posted by: berthold | Apr 3 2025 17:12 utc | 198

unimperator@149
This is what I have been reading a lot about the last few days. The Great Capital Rotation is complete now with all 11 sectors in a bear market as gold and silver miners, ETF’s and all commodities are looking to increase 10X for the next few years. Dow vs Gold will be 1 to 1 again and the S&P vs Gold will return to 0.5 again as well.
This means we are in a commodities bull run with a few more years of “winning” if you are noticing and motivated to get in near the ground floor.
SPTTGD to the moon Alice??
Got gold?? Silver and copper??

Posted by: bisfugged | Apr 3 2025 17:13 utc | 199

@Sunny Runny Burger #186
Just because the house has a statistical advantage does not mean a casino can never go bankrupt.
Casinos have expenses: rent, staff, debt repayments, a lot of regulatory. It also typically costs money to get people to come to your casino (vs others, or at all).
And unlike goods-sellers, their margin is typically a legally mandated 5% or so vs. the 20% to 50% for a consumer goods company.
And also unlike a consumer goods company, casinos absolutely can and do have runs of “bad” luck (from their perspective). Sometimes it is theft/schemes but genuine runs occur as well. I have personally witnessed a guy win nearly $80,000 on blackjack betting no more than $500 a hand – said guy literally had no idea what the F he was doing: splitting 10s and hitting on hard counts etc etc. His drunken foolery just happened to work for 6 hours straight. A big casino can handle that, no problem but a small one could not. And whales do get on runs too…

Posted by: c1ue | Apr 3 2025 17:14 utc | 200