American Distillers Brace for Huge E.U. Tariff Hike
More than five years after it began, former President Donald Trump's trade war is still spiraling out of control.

From the front door of his distillery on the outskirts of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Jeff Quint knows he doesn't have to worry much about a supply chain for raw materials. All he has to do is take a look around.
Cedar Ridge Distillery's top product is its bourbon. Bourbon is made from corn. And there's no shortage of corn in Iowa, the top corn-growing state in the world's top corn-growing nation.
The other half of the equation is what keeps Quint awake at night. For reasons completely beyond his control, the distribution channels for American-made bourbon could soon be crushed by new tariffs of 50 percent that the European Union (E.U.) has threatened to implement on January 1.
"It's probably top of the mind for the average distiller right now," Quint tells Reason of the upcoming deadline for a tariff decision. "It was retaliatory and that's what they chose, so…all we can do is try to make it go away."
He's got some help in making that happen. In a letter to the White House last week, a bipartisan group of senators called on the Biden administration to seek an "expedited agreement" with the E.U. to avert the tariff increase on January 1 and to take those tariffs off the table as a long-term option for resolving a trade conflict that has nothing to do with whiskey in the first place.
"There are mutual benefits in finding a path forward, and our belief is that spirits and wines are a point where there can be consensus to limit the damage for all parties," the 17 senators wrote in the letter.
The E.U. imposed retaliatory tariffs on American whiskey (along with other quintessentially American products like blue jeans and motorcycles) in June 2018 after the Trump administration unilaterally slapped tariffs on all imported steel and aluminum. Trump's tariffs were sold as an anti-China measure, but covered imports from allies like the E.U. and South Korea as well. The E.U.'s retaliatory tariffs, meanwhile, occurred despite promises from Trump's top trade adviser that other countries would not respond with tariffs targeting American goods.
Due to those 25 percent tariffs, whiskey exports to Europe fell by about 20 percent between 2018 and 2021, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (DISCUS), which lobbies on behalf of American booze producers. That decline in foreign sales cost American distilleries over $100 million.
Those tariffs were temporarily suspended in 2022, and exports to Europe rebounded almost immediately, according to DISCUS' data. Over the past two years, exports to the E.U. increased by 29 percent and exceeded pre-tariff levels.
Now that recent growth is at risk. If no deal is reached by January 1, the E.U. could decide to reimpose the tariffs at 50 percent—double the previous levels—when the temporary reprieve expires.
"A return of these debilitating tariffs would be a severe blow to U.S. distillers and bring this positive momentum to a screeching halt," Chris Swonger, president and CEO of DISCUS, said in a statement.
A meeting in October between President Joe Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen failed to resolve the impasse. Now, the clock is ticking.
Whatever happens, Quint and his 65 employees at Cedar Ridge Distillery are helpless to do much about it—and the same is true for the thousands of other employees, entrepreneurs, and investors at work in the American whiskey industry. That's what trade wars do: give government officials greater control over the success or failure of individual businesses, even those that are far removed from whatever geopolitical spat caused the conflict in the first place.
Trump's been out of office for nearly three years, but the consequences of his half-baked trade wars are still spiraling out of control—in no small part because of Biden's unwillingness to end them. Another escalation in that conflict now looms over American distillers.
Quint tells Reason that he remains "cautiously optimistic" that an agreement will be reached before the end of the year.
"It's such a logical thing to to try to avoid the reinstatement of the tariffs," he says. "But, that said, it's approaching the middle of December and we've got two or three weeks for this to happen."
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If there is an available solution, bourbon distillers and corn growers are all ears.
Trump's been out of office for nearly three years, but the consequences of his half-baked trade wars are still spiraling out of control—in no small part because of Biden's unwillingness to end them.
Glad to see all those intellectually honest Trump supporters praising Biden for continuing Trump's economic policies.
No tariffs existed prior to trump said all the dumbfucks.
Where did you get the overalls for your strawman?
GTFO you drunk pussy. No one wants to put up with your retarded shit today.
Actually, the article has re-established my faith in Reason as a lonely purveyor of right and truth and libertarianism. Silly me, I thought there was no way anyone could find to make the price of whiskey, whether temporarily up or down, the fault of the mean-tweeting bad Orange Man, but lo, here is the evidence that TDS remains a risk.
Seriously though, why aren’t you praising Biden? As far as I can tell he’s continuing Trump’s trade war. If you had a shred of honesty you’d give him credit for doing what you praised Trump for doing. That would mean you supported Trump’s tariffs in principle. But I don’t think you do. I think you supported Trump’s anti-free trade policies because of the man, not the policies. The proof is your inability to credit Biden for continuing them.
Unlike you, some people actually give credit where it is due. Whereas you judge people, not their actions. So when someone you hate does something you like, you'll shit on them anyway.
There’s no ‘trade war’ under Biden you drunk pussy. He just likes tariffs for their own sake. But you’re too stupid to understand that.
The refusal by Biden to end all the trade wars is his major failure as President.
He should have reduced all tariffs to 1% on January 21st, 2021.
I dunno. But I'm sure glad to see your intellectually honest self praising Trump for his tariff/tax policies. Oh wait; that is what you're doing isn't it?
Well the funny thing is that the tariffs that Trump initiated were the same ones that the steel industry begged Obama to implement. Only when Trump did it the Steel Unions castigated him for it. Biden has left them in place (I thought that he pledged to undo everything Trump did) because the Unions that support the Democrats want them there.
Another Boehm "Blame Trump" article. Seems to be all that he know how to write these days.
I’m torn between feeling bad for the distillers, who have to make decisions about the quantity of whiskey they make years out before they sell it, and the possibility of cheap, abundant whiskey in the U.S.
I say the author’s full of shit.
The EU would’ve imposed these tariffs regardless of anything Trump has done. There’s nothing Europe or the UK can do in a fair market to compete with the awe inspiring American whiskey renaissance, which Boehm may be unaware of.
And Boehm voted ‘strategically’ for Biden. Who sees tariffs as economically structural necessities. Not tools for leveraging freer international trade, like Trump did.
Apparently, "freer international trade" is secret code for "triggering retaliatory tariffs on unrelated industries".
Idiot. Trump doesn't believe in international trade.
More than five years after it began, former President Donald Trump’s trade war is still spiraling out of control.
Fucking LOL. “I just kahn’t dew it, Captn! I DEWNT! HAVE! THA POWER!”
Refinancing all government-backed student loans, mandating EVs, irreversibly deferring action on illegal immigrants with a pen and a phone, pushing the end of a war back as a political stunt, ending COVID while still spending money to fight COVID, shaking foreign governments down for payoffs/quid pro quo as a VP… all *that* Biden has the power to do, but not ending a tariff or excepting some products from tariff.
If it was good enough for trump, Biden is all in!
Bullshit. When it comes to Trump and or tarrifs Reason is wrong every time.
EU announces it can tax it's own citizens MORE than the USA can.
Funny how the narrative flip-flops to fit the free-ride for importers agenda.
Whatever you do... DON'T dig into the details on this trade issue. Don't do it. Don't look at it. Just frame it as a "Trump" thing.
From one of the links to the links to the links to the links to the links to the links to the links to the links.
Oh, and while I'm too lazy to quote and link further, you know what else is behind this? That's right... climate change. There is a subtext to all of this where the thing we agreed to disagree on and got? The Green New Deal? Yeah, it's part of all of this.
So as long as the tariffs were imposed by Trump, you were fine with it, but as they persisted under Biden, why then the case is altered.
Because it means Biden is worse than trump, because he should know better.
No, I'm fine with it because they persisted under Biden, as anyone who read his website knew they would be.
No faggot, that was never it. Good to see you spreading leftist lies, as usual.
Trump used tariffs for the express purpose of leveraging foreign countries to lower or eliminate their own. So stop with your bullshit. No one is buying.
How's that "lowering or eliminating their own tariffs" thing going, by the way?
Considering the current EU thing is to destroy efficient energy, massively cut consumption and standard of living, and torpedo the tourist industry that feeds half of them, (all within the next decade or two), why would they suddenly attempt to lower the costs of anything?
Not to worry, the democrat economy will drive many millions more Americans to drink.
Isn't it a bit silly to still be calling this Trump's trade war? Beginning of June 2018 through the end of January 2021 is 32 months. Beginning of February 2021 through the end of November 2023 is 34 months. So even rounding massively all one way, this is more than half Biden's war.
First ever comment in my years reading/supporting reason.
Yes, everything is Trump's fault. 34 months later "Trump!!".
The D rule is: Once Trump, Forever Trump
You can really see how the Marxists are in the commentariat.
Bush was at fault still 10 years after Obama was elected. Lefty shits never change.
You think it is irrelevant who started the war? Biden is certainly to blame for continuing it, but it's highly uncertain he would have been able to initiate it himself even if he had wanted to.
No, it is relevant who started the war, particularly because that person (presumably) would do it all again if he regains power. Why would he not? Was there something wrong with his 'beautiful' steel and aluminum tariffs?
If he keeps us from complying with Agenda 2030 and the 17 sustainability goals, anything else will be an economic drop in the bucket,
The Euroshits also increased their mailing costs, many times two or three times higher that what the items cost. And in my shitty state I have to pay a 10% tax on the cost of the item AND the shipping cost.
Ha ha ha.
Again, ha ha ha.
What is it you just have to buy in the EU? Are you some kind of American traitor?
There’s been a textile war for years. Found out back in 2002ish when I bought a bunch of discount World Cup stuff from a British website. My $50 order became a $125 when I got hit with some kind of fee from customs. I called them up to ask WTF, and they said they pick a few packages at random and whack them with it. I was one of the lucky winners.