President Donald Trump’s unprecedented tariffs on imports into the United States came into effect Wednesday, reshaping the global economic order that has been largely present for generations.
The mere announcement of last week’s job has sent shockwaves through the global market, causing trillions of dollars of paper losses. Now, both consumers and investors alike begin to assess the actual impact on the US economy as import tax costs begin to flow through the supply chain to businesses and households.
The average tariffs faced by dozens of countries covered by Trump are 29%, most are 40%. The White House has posted a full list here. China’s imports will carry a cumulative rate of 104%, along with the taxes he already enacted during his first term, due to the new tariffs Trump imposed this year. They came into effect late Tuesday.
Trump is trying to restructure the world’s global economic order by reducing US dependence on foreign imports. In a debate about how national tariffs were calculated, Trump acknowledges that his goal is to effectively erase or reverse the US trade deficit.
Already, Trump has enacted a 10% baseline tariff on goods brought to the US. And he said he would negotiate the trade, but he gave little indication of tolerance. He only posts a note in the morning, saying he believes China is seeking deals alongside other potential agreements his administration is debating with Japan, South Korea and other countries.
Tariffs are not new and many business leaders have long argued that the US must do more to prevent low-cost goods from China, especially the market from flooding.
But Trump shocked the world with his attempts to bring to the US the vast array of goods that are mostly more affordable.
“It’s way too fast,” said Craig Fuller, founder and CEO of logistics consulting firm FreightWaves. Companies, especially small businesses, are not equipped to change supply chains at the speed and speed and scale of Trump’s desires, he added, and while they try to consider them, they will face enormous increases in costs.
“That’s not realistic,” Fuller said.
Trump shows little desire to “no” on the answer, even if financial markets plummet.
On Monday, he told White House reporters, “I see a beautiful photo at the end, so I shouldn’t go through it.”
Economists are less optimistic about the customs program. Many are alarming about what is possible next. In a note to clients ahead of Wednesday’s deadline, a Wells Fargo analyst said tariffs are likely to cause a “sloppy” savvy “shock” in the US economy. As prices rise, they will contribute to eroding real income growth and triggering contracts, they said.
And if other countries retaliate with tariffs equivalent to the taxes the US has already slapped them, they wrote, “the actual contraction of GDP is even deeper.”
“Due to the economic downturn, the unemployment rate will rise from about 4% to about 5% from current levels,” they wrote.
That 5% unemployment rate reflects similar forecasts from analysts with JPMorgan last week. He says, “The pinch from a higher price expected in the coming months could be more intense than post-expense inflation spikes.”
“And in an environment of increasing uncertainty, consumers may be reluctant to be too immersed in savings to fund spending growth.”
Some countries have already retaliated. Canada said it has set a 25% mandate on some US-made cars and all US-made auto parts as it is in effect Wednesday.
“President Trump has caused this trade crisis, and Canada is responding with purpose and power,” Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney wrote on X on Tuesday.
China has already clashed with 34% tariffs on American products (mainly energy and agricultural products), and Trump is urging them to say the new mandate for Chinese products will come into effect on Wednesday. China is also considering a ban on US cultural exports like the cinema.
Perhaps most worrying is the decline in borrowing rates that Trump has been hoping to tackle his budget plan better. Yields, or interest rates, require investors to lend money to the government, showed yields, or rates, that were above the level that had hit before Trump’s tariffs roll out last week.
With all the massive movements in financial markets already underway, some experts say that might just be the beginning.
“The historical changes in trade policy will not be digested anytime soon,” wrote Jens Nordvig, founder and CEO of Exante Data Financial Consultancy, in X late Tuesday.