Friday, November 29, 2024

How Trump’s tariffs would 'aggressively' transfer wealth from the poor to the rich: journalist




Carl Gibson

September 20, 2024
RAW STORY

The cornerstone of former President Donald Trump's economic agenda for a possible second term is steep tariffs on imported goods. This is ostensibly to help even the playing field for American companies, but one veteran journalist is arguing that it's a thinly veiled attempt to redistribute wealth upward from the poor to the rich.

In a recent article for the New Republic, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist David Cay Johnston explained why tariffs are particularly harmful for the working class and a huge boon for the owner class. He made the case that tariffs are not only a form of a sales tax in that tariffs would just be passed onto consumers in the form of higher prices, but that they double as a way for business owners to "aggressively" price gouge goods with little blowback.

Johnston used the example of a car dealership (which often import vehicles from Asia and Europe) to illustrate how tariffs serve as a one-two punch to both inflict higher prices and increase profits for businesses. For the sake of simplicity, the journalist posited a scenario in which cars would sell for $10,000, with $1,000 of each sale being pocketed as profit.

READ MORE: Trump's newest policy proposal would be a 'huge tax increase' for the middle class: analysis

" Trump says he will slap a 60 percent tariff on imported goods from China," Johnston wrote. "The dealers who sell Chinese cars in America will have to raise their prices to $16,000. If you buy a Chinese car, you will pay that tariff, not China. Indeed, the only harm to China would be selling fewer cars because the tariff would make Chinese cars too costly for many Americans."

"But remember, you own an American car company. Will you continue selling your cars for $10,000 to earn a $1,000 profit per vehicle? Not a chance," Johnston continued, noting that a fundamental practice of business in a capitalist economy is profit maximization.

"Trump’s tariff means you can raise the price of your vehicles to $16,000 and not lose any market share. However, the Trump tariff doesn’t apply to you since you are a domestic carmaker. That means you will collect not $1,000 profit per car but $7,000, all paid by your customers," he added. "But because profit maximization is your goal, you will likely undercut the Chinese car companies. To simplify the math, you would charge $15,000 for each car. That’s a large enough discount that some people who want a Chinese car will purchase your American-made car instead."

Johnston then pointed out that the $1,000 profit from each car sold would "skyrocket to $6,000," which "comes at no cost" since the business wouldn't have to hire more workers, or make additional capital investments on improving their facilities.

With imported cars costing 50% to 60% more, Johnston observed that car dealerships would instead likely invest their higher profits in hiring more auto mechanics, in order to extend the life of the cars they're still selling. He noted that this would bring in an entirely new stream of profit, as a car dealership would be able to make more money from selling spare parts and charging for mechanic services.

"Trump’s tariffs stand to make you so much money that you’d be laughing not just on your way to the bank but on your way to your megayacht, private jumbo jet, private Caribbean islands, and your many mansions," he wrote. "Now, if you think America’s problem is that the rich don’t have nearly enough—well, please vote for Donald Trump."


'Who's going to pay? We are': Fox News host admits Trump tariffs are bad for Americans

David Edwards
November 28, 2024 

Fox News/screen grab

Fox News host Julie Banderas warned viewers that they should be prepared to pay more for goods if president-elect Donald Trump follows through with his threat to place tariffs on CanadaMexico and China.

While speaking to small business "expert" Gene Marks on Thursday, Banderas noted that Trump had vowed to make tariffs "so high, so horrible, so obnoxious" to force businesses to move to the United States.

"Oh, it's going to be a wild ride," she remarked. "Let's be realistic. I mean, a lot of American companies do not buy American. They do rely on a lot of merchandise that is purchased from other countries."

"Is this going to increase prices to you and me?" the host asked Marks.

"Oh, yeah. It could," the guest admitted. "It just depends on how the businesses decide to absorb those price increases."

"I think if American companies are forced to buy American, it is going to cost more ultimately," Banderas pointed out. "And then who's going to pay for that? We are."

"We are going to be buying the merchandise that they are going to have to raise the costs on because they're not going to be buying from foreign countries," she added. "So ultimately, it does come down to the taxpayer dollar."

Watch the video below from Fox News.



'Comes out of consumers’ pockets': Here’s how much more you’ll pay under Trump’s tariffs

ALTERNET
November 26, 2024

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