An 'impossible trinity' of goals for Trump's tariffs
By Robert Burgess / Bloomberg Opinion
If youve spent hopeless hours searching for coherence in the White Houses trade strategy set to be unveiled April 2 a date President Donald Trump is calling Liberation Day dont fret because there is none to be found.
To date, Trump has put forward three primary objectives of the levies. The first is raising tax revenue to help close the federal budget deficit and pay for an extension of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 that is due to expire at the end of the year. The second is to bring back to the U.S. manufacturing jobs that have migrated overseas, igniting a new Golden Age of America. The third is to achieve foreign policy goals.
Each one of those objectives would be hard enough to achieve on their own, but all at the same time as Trump suggests? Inconceivable would be an understatement. The impossible trinity of tariff objectives is how the economists at Morgan Stanley put it in a research report. Tariffs would have to be much higher, and more persistent than what the White House has floated to be a significant source of tax revenue, they concluded. And thats taking into account the notion that the U.S. tariff rate will rise to an average of somewhere between 10 percent to 15 percent, the highest since the 1940s and up from around 2.2 percent currently.
Indeed, the Budget Lab at Yale has done extensive work on the impact of tariffs. It estimates that based on what has been proposed, tariffs on imported goods would raise around $3.52 trillion between 2026 and 2035 (paid for by U.S. importers and, ultimately, consumers and not the exporting countries). A big number, but far short of the $4.6 trillion deficit expansion through 2034 that the Congressional Budget Office projected would come from extending the TCJA, Trumps signature piece of legislation in his first administration. Nor will tariff revenue put a dent in a budget shortfall that was $1.8 trillion in fiscal 2024 alone and which the CBO estimates will total $21.8 trillion through 2035 (and thats without any changes to prevailing tax laws).
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-an-impossible-trinity-of-goals-for-trumps-tariffs/