A Federal Reserve study published in April 2026 confirmed what economists had tracked since the tariff escalations of early 2025: core goods prices are now 3.1 percent higher than pre-pandemic trend rates, and tariffs explain the entirety of that gap. The finding landed with little fanfare, buried beneath geopolitical headlines. But for the roughly 330 million people who shop in America, its meaning is concrete. Every year, on current tariff schedules, the average household pays between $700 and $1,500 more than it did in 2023. The burden is not theoretical. It is priced into the shoes, the appliances, the furniture and the children’s toys that Americans have long sourced from China’s manufacturing base.

The dominant narrative frames tariffs as leverage against Beijing. The data tell a different story: the leverage is mostly being applied against American consumers, and disproportionately against those least able to absorb it.

China’s light manufacturing base, built over four decades, produces goods at a combination of scale, integrated supply chains and accumulated process know-how that no alternative currently matches. When tariffs raise the cost of Chinese-made goods, American buyers do not suddenly find equivalent products made elsewhere at lower prices. They pay more, switch to inferior substitutes, or go without.

The Yale Budget Lab estimates that the tariff burden, expressed as a share of post-tax income, falls roughly three times harder on the lowest income decile than on the top. The National Retail Federation has calculated that higher tariffs on Chinese imports raise household appliance prices by nearly 7 percent, shoes by nearly 5 percent, furniture by 4 percent and apparel by nearly 2 percent. These are not luxury categories. They are the weekly and annual purchases of ordinary working families.

Supporters of the tariff policy argue that short-term consumer pain is the price of rebuilding domestic manufacturing. The argument deserves serious engagement. But the evidence from several years of elevated tariffs on Chinese goods does not support a reshoring dividend at meaningful scale.

Research published in the International Journal of Production Economics found no robust evidence of US reshoring following earlier tariff rounds. What happened instead was trade diversion: imports from China fell, imports from Vietnam, India and Mexico rose, and total import volumes stayed roughly flat. US factories did not fill the gap.

The jobs promise has now run long enough to be measured against reality. The American Enterprise Institute calculated that the annual cost to American consumers of shifting each job from service employment to manufacturing through tariff protection exceeds $225,000 per job per year, indefinitely. For context, the average US manufacturing wage is roughly $60,000. The arithmetic means consumers are being taxed at nearly four times the value of each job nominally being protected. Meanwhile, the Bureau of Labor Statistics recorded a net loss of more than 65,000 manufacturing jobs between April 2025 and April 2026. The promised factories have not arrived. The higher prices have.

A February 2026 report from the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation sharpened the diagnosis. Even where production has nominally shifted to the United States or allied nations, the internal value chains of multinationals remain deeply anchored in China, from manufacturing know-how to materials to intellectual property. Geographic relabeling is not the same as genuine supply chain independence.

None of this means tariffs serve no purpose. China’s subsidized manufacturing has, in some sectors, displaced American capacity in ways that genuine security arguments can address. Export controls on advanced semiconductors and restrictions on dual-use technologies are defensible on national security grounds and distinct from broad consumer goods tariffs.

The issue is precision. Applying uniform tariff pressure across light manufacturing, consumer electronics and household goods conflates security concerns with trade grievances. The costs fall almost entirely on American buyers rather than on Chinese policymakers or exporters.

What the data suggest is not capitulation to Chinese trade practices. It is a more surgical approach: targeted controls where security genuinely requires them, and managed trade in the consumer supply chain where the primary effect of restrictions is to raise prices without producing new American factory jobs. The QIMA sourcing survey found that reshoring accounted for only 7.6 percent of US sourcing in 2025, barely changed from 2024, while inspection demand in Southeast Asia jumped 42 percent year on year. The substitution is happening abroad, not at home.

The business community has registered its own verdict. The Cato Institute’s analysis of 2025 manufacturing data found a consistent asymmetry: the narrow set of primary metal producers protected by tariffs added a modest number of jobs, while far larger downstream sectors, including machinery, computers and transportation equipment, that rely on those metals as inputs recorded some of the steepest job losses of any year since the 2008 financial crisis. The December 2025 ISM Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index fell to 47.9, its lowest reading of the year and the sector’s tenth consecutive month in contraction territory. When the policy designed to rebuild manufacturing is driving the manufacturing sector’s own purchasing managers into contraction, the internal logic has broken down. Tariff policy that raises consumer prices while shrinking the industrial base it claims to protect is not protection. It is a tax with a story attached.

The November 2026 tariff truce deadline is the most consequential date in US household economics this year. If it lapses without a framework, the elevated tariff regime resumes. The families who would feel it most are the same ones already stretching grocery budgets and delaying appliance replacements. Policymakers who care about working-class living standards should engage that deadline with the same urgency they apply to pharmaceutical costs and housing affordability. The price of clothing, furniture and children’s toys is part of that same conversation.