An Early Look at the Implications of Tariffs and a Trade War

Over the weekend, the Trump administration announced it was imposing a 25% tariff on goods imported from Canada and Mexico as well as a 10% tariff on goods from China. It’s a clear signal that a new trade war has begun. We can’t know at this stage the specifics of what will come next (a back and forth continues), but in our view trade tensions will be persistent: there’s more to come.

Canada, Mexico and China are the largest trading partners of the US, collectively accounting for roughly 40% of all US imports: more than $1 trillion in goods per year. The companies and individuals who import goods pay the tariffs—the measures recently announced are a tax on those goods.

How Will the New Tariffs Affect the US Economy?

As with any tax, the latest salvo of tariffs will likely reduce growth by taking money from consumers’ pockets. But tariffs are more complicated to assess than typical tax policies. For most imported goods, businesses will pay the tax at the border; households don’t pay it directly.

The question then becomes whether that higher cost to businesses is passed through to consumers through higher prices—and if so, how much of a hit it will be. During the 2018 trade war, almost all of the higher tariffs eventually fed through to higher consumer prices, and we expect the same to be true this time. The result: households will face higher prices for imported goods.

From our perspective, tariffs will boost prices but aren’t truly “inflationary” from a policymaking perspective. When the Federal Reserve sets monetary policy, it focuses on sustained price pressures—not one-off adjustments to the price level. Tariffs more closely resemble the one-off variety.

To put it another way, the Fed can’t change the price impact of tariffs by moving interest rates. As a result, we don’t think it’s likely that trade policy will significantly affect the central bank’s policy trajectory. We believe the Fed will assess the balance between slower growth and higher prices rather than responding preemptively to changes in global trade patterns.