Walmart just leveled with Americans: China won’t be paying for Trump’s tariffs, in all likelihood you will

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Walmart just leveled with Americans: China won’t be paying for Trump’s tariffs, in all likelihood you will​

BYCHRISTIAAN HETZNER
November 22, 2024 at 9:00 PM GMT+8

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Voters who returned Donald Trump to the Oval Office in hopes that living costs would return to the halcyon days before the pandemic may be in for a shock.


Arkansas-based Walmart, the world’s largest retailer that traditionally has catered to working- and middle-class Americans, warned the President-elect’s plans to hike import duties across the board will be felt by everyday consumers.

“Tariffs are going to be inflationary, there’s no disputing that,” Walmart finance chief John David Rainey told Fox News on Thursday.

That’s not the message the Trump campaign took to the nation during the 2024 election race, however. During the campaign, the former president asked whether voters were better off than they were a little less than five years ago, when the seeds of inflation were sown with the outbreak of COVID-19.

The resounding answer was no, as two-thirds of the population were dissatisfied with the state of the economy. Coast to coast, Americans felt a deep-seated resentment at spiraling prices on everything from gasoline to groceries to restaurant visits.

Trump labels tariffs a ‘tax on foreign countries’ with no downside​

In came the Trump campaign, which repeatedly portrayed tariffs as a panacea. They would fill the nation’s coffers, reduce the deficit, bring back manufacturing jobs—and might even eliminate the need for income taxes. And the costs? Well, those would be borne by others—chiefly U.S. strategic rival China, which could face duties as high as 60% on goods it exported.

“A tariff is a tax on a foreign country, that’s the way it is whether you like it or not,” Trump promised supporters at an August rally in the key battleground state of Pennsylvania. “It’s a tax on a country that’s ripping us off and stealing our jobs.”

The National Retail Federation, however, begged to disagree. Unless exporters are both willing and able to drop their factory gate prices in order to maintain volumes, the costs will entirely be borne by Americans—either directly in the form of import duties, indirectly through higher prices passed on to the customer, or some mix thereof.

“A tariff is a tax paid by the U.S. importer, not a foreign country or the exporter,” NRF vice president Jonathan Gold said in a statement published one day prior to the November elections.

Advantages and disadvantages of tariffs​

Limited tariffs targeted at strategic economic sectors—those vital to national security, for example—can be sensible, and every country imposes duties in one form or another. Some can be through the back door by requiring certain regulations be met in order to protect domestic sectors such as farming and agriculture.

And while economic incentives like tax breaks can encourage migratory manufacturers to move their factories back onshore, tariffs can be effective as well.

Yet they can also cause businesses downstream of these producers to shrink as they must shoulder higher costs. As a result, they can inadvertently lead to a loss in American jobs when all effects are netted out.

Even for those U.S. goods that might not require any foreign inputs, tariffs can also be inflationary since they are an invitation for domestic suppliers to hike prices simply to pad profits for shareholders. Finally, they can trigger a retaliatory trade war if left unchecked.

Walmart warns, ‘We’re not immune’—and costs will be passed on​

That’s why most industrialized countries traditionally have followed economic orthodoxy by seeking to dismantle tariffs, instead specializing in goods and services where they enjoy a competitive advantage.

The resulting era of highly efficient, globalized supply chains caused prices for many goods to decline, with flat-screen television sets being an often cited example.

This now could come to an abrupt end if Trump imposes a blanket tariff on all imported goods that could range anywhere from 10% to 20%.

Walmart finance boss Rainey said the massive retailer would do its utmost to cushion the blow—but pain was inevitable.

“We’re going to work with our suppliers as well as our own private brand assortment to continue to try to bring down prices for customers,” he told Fox News. “But we’re not immune, and tariffs will be inflationary for customers.”
 
Lol, Americans can say good bye to Chinese products at large, Chinese companies are not going to pay 60% tariffs out their pockets on their products becus they will be losing big money just in order to enter US markets, no fools will pay the tariffs, and American consumers will unlikely at large to pay 60% price hikes on Chinese products. So Trump gov and Americans have to manufacture those products themselves or import from other countries at much higher prices if they can be done. US might as well cut relation with PRC.
 
Lol, Americans can say good bye to Chinese products at large, Chinese companies are not going to pay 60% tariffs out their pockets on their products becus they will be losing big money just in order to enter US markets, no fools will pay the tariffs, and American consumers will unlikely at large to pay 60% price hikes on Chinese products. So Trump gov and Americans have to manufacture those products themselves or import from other countries at much higher prices if they can be done. US might as well cut relation with PRC.

Doesn't China have VAT taxes as high as 50% on some imported goods?

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Lol, Americans can say good bye to Chinese products at large, Chinese companies are not going to pay 60% tariffs out their pockets on their products becus they will be losing big money just in order to enter US markets, no fools will pay the tariffs, and American consumers will unlikely at large to pay 60% price hikes on Chinese products. So Trump gov and Americans have to manufacture those products themselves or import from other countries at much higher prices if they can be done. US might as well cut relation with PRC.
hes going to get a reality check when hes in office. right now hes trying to be a hero

Doesn't China have VAT taxes as high as 50% on some imported goods?

Capatalist first world people shouldn't comment on matters that they dont understand
 
Doesn't China have VAT taxes as high as 50% on some imported goods?
I don't know about the VAT taxes, but definitely not 50% on all or many items of imported products. Besides, China can probably find substitutes for those imports.
 
Lol, Americans can say good bye to Chinese products at large, Chinese companies are not going to pay 60% tariffs out their pockets on their products becus they will be losing big money just in order to enter US markets, no fools will pay the tariffs, and American consumers will unlikely at large to pay 60% price hikes on Chinese products. So Trump gov and Americans have to manufacture those products themselves or import from other countries at much higher prices if they can be done. US might as well cut relation with PRC.
60% tariffs on China and 10% tariffs on ROW will lead to more factories relocating out of China
 
60% tariffs on China and 10% tariffs on ROW will lead to more factories relocating out of China
You dream, China's exports are not declining, they are expanding, US market becomes less and less relevant.


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Costfoto/NurPhoto/Getty Images/File
China-made cars and buses bound for export at the Lianyungang Port in Lianyungang, China, on October 31, 2024.

“China has been preparing for this day for quite some time. The US is much less important to its trade network (than it was before),” said Dexter Roberts, author of the Trade War newsletter and a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council.

Just under 30% of China’s exports went to the Group of Seven (G7) rich countries last year, down from 48% in 2000, according to Matthews Asia. That’s why, despite selling less to the United States, China’s share of global exports is now at 14%, up from 13% before the first Trump tariffs.
 
60% tariffs on China and 10% tariffs on ROW will lead to more factories relocating out of China
Lol, what's good for American consumers ? Good luck to make manufacturing move back to US by imposing 60% tariffs if it works.
 
Lol, what's good for American consumers ? Good luck to make manufacturing move back to US by imposing 60% tariffs if it works.
Can you comprehend ?
60% tariffs on China and 10% tariffs on ROW
 
Can you comprehend ?
60% tariffs on China and 10% tariffs on ROW
Lol, the main target is China on 60%, you think imposing 10% tariffs on other counties will make companies move back to US ? Dream on, you know what are the costs to operate factories in US.
 
Can you comprehend ?
60% tariffs on China and 10% tariffs on ROW
If you are happy to pay for that, be my guest, Chinese exports and surplus are still surging fast. US market becomes less and less relevant.
 
American made goods are 2 to 3 times more expensive than Chinese imports like here in the UK because of wages, unions and labor laws. Americans according to Media are living paycheck to paycheck cannot afford American made goods. If iPhones were made in the USA, they would cost about £5000 . So what do you propose they do Trump? Abolish their labor laws and create a lower working class society where people are forced to work for the same wages in China? These Trump MAGA supporters are absolute buffoons.
 
I LOVE Trump and really missed his presence in the White House since 2021.

Biden is boring even with his multiple dementia gaffs, like not being able to get off a stage as he got confused which way was down.

Not only will Trump give us endless entertainment with his personality but he will drag the US more and more into the moral and economic gutter.

What's not to like here?! (y)
 

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