I have 0 maths or economy skills, so I do need it explained like I’m 5. They’re in the news a lot atm but I just don’t understand them

  • Phil_in_here
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    2 days ago

    When you import something from another country, it needs to go through things like customs, etc. You have to fill out all the paperwork about what it is and where it’s going (if you’re using/selling it in the US or just middlemanning it somewhere else).

    Part of that paperwork includes tariffs, a tax on the good you are importing. So, the importer has to pay the government that money in order for the product to legally come in to the country. The importer pays that cost, so the local purchaser pays that cost, so the consumer pays that cost. And each one of those (and likely many other) steps probably will add on a little extra for the trouble.

    The hope is that encourages local production; even if it costs more to produce locally, when you factor in the cost of the tariffs to import, it might make sense to invest the cost to avoid the tariffs.

    The troubles are:

    1. you can’t often make a fully operational supply chain domestically in 4 years
    2. the US doesn’t have some of those raw resources, like minerals or regional food sources
    3. good or bad, places like China can pay professional factory workers way less than minimum US wage, which, in case this is news to anyone, is already far below a livable wage
    • Lady Butterfly @lazysoci.alOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      3
      ·
      2 days ago

      Thank you so much for this simple breakdown! It makes sense now and im bookmarking the comment. Why do you think the government is putting these tarrifs in? The real reason, not what they’re telling people.

      • Phil_in_here
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        3
        ·
        1 day ago

        The cynical perspective is that it’s an attempt to consolidate wealth for the wealthy.

        Basically, you drive the price up on everything and force the least able to bear the loss in revenue to give up and sell.

        Elon Musk can afford to lose $11 billion, because he still has $200 billion left over and that is obviously more than anyone needs to keep afloat for a few bad years. The same goes for every billionaire and every multibillion dollar company.