Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 3/5/2025
President Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico went into effect Tuesday, along with a heightened 20% levy on Chinese goods. In response, all three countries announced retaliatory measures.

Experts say consumers and businesses will be the hardest hit. Companies big and small will face higher costs on the goods they buy from other countries — and could have little recourse but to hike prices themselves. For consumers, that will likely mean more expensive price tags on everything from cars, appliances and other big-ticket items to smaller, everyday purchases including electronics, gasoline and groceries.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00These tariffs, we have no idea if they'll still be on by the time we finish this conversation,
00:05let alone 5, 10 years.
00:07So we're not going to give industry the right incentives to change their investment patterns.
00:12The only thing we are giving industry an incentive to do is wait, hold back, delay investments,
00:18which we're already seeing out there in the investment community.
00:22So by any metric, revenue generation, leverage, or industrial policy, this really doesn't
00:29check any boxes.
00:3025% tariffs on Canada and Mexico, our second and third largest trading partners, are going
00:37to increase costs for everyday Americans by an enormous amount.
00:42Estimates suggest that this is going to increase the cost of living to Americans by about $1,500
00:49per household.
00:50The authorities under which they've been imposed is a national security tariff to combat legal
00:57fentanyl.
00:58That has really no basis in reality for Canada.
01:01There's an incredibly small amount of fentanyl that goes over the border.
01:07It doesn't really make any sense.
01:10If these tariffs stay on, everyday Americans will start feeling the pain.
01:15And then the question will be, will they continue down this course, which I certainly hope they
01:19won't, or do we course correct?
01:21It's going to go up in price, groceries, gas prices, the price of your car, the prices
01:28of sugar and furniture and things like that.
01:32So in those of us who have less money to spend, those of us who spend a larger share of their
01:39income on those everyday necessities are going to pay a larger share of this tax.

Recommended