'Liberation Day' Tariffs Will Liberate People—From Their Income
Lower-income families who spend the largest shares of their income on goods—and who have been badly hurt from the recent inflation—will likely suffer the most.

We're told that "Liberation Day" tariffs on imports from around the world will raise $6 trillion in federal revenue over the next decade, plus another trillion from automobile tariffs. But the only true "liberation" will be us Americans—consumers and taxpayers—being liberated from even more of our hard-earned income. So hold on to your wallet.
If you don't believe that Liberation Day is bad news for the overwhelming majority of us, first remember that U.S. consumers are, as always, the ones who pay U.S. tariffs. Whatever the Trump team collects from foreign imports will be shifted back to us in the form of higher prices.
Then there is the fact that the administration is already preparing for economic damage control with emergency aid for U.S. farmers. The need for such aid is a tacit admission that the president's trade policy—marketed as a tool to strengthen America—will trigger retaliations from our trading partners that will hurt many American producers, including farmers who export this country's agricultural bounty to help feed the world.
And to paper over this destructive policy, the administration will blow another gaping hole in the federal budget with bailout money to compensate the victims.
How do I know? We've been here before.
During Trump's first term, his trade war with China sparked retaliatory tariffs that cost American farmers an estimated $27 billion in lost agricultural exports. To cushion the blow on farmers, the administration spent $23 billion in bailout payments via the Department of Agriculture's Commodity Credit Corporation. By one estimate, farmers received 92 percent of the tariffs on Chinese goods paid by us via higher prices at the supermarket.
Now the administration is gearing up for a rerun with even higher and broader tariffs, including on allies such as Canada, Europe, Mexico, and Japan.
As it turns out, American agriculture is one of the most export-dependent sectors of the economy. When trading partners retaliate, they target farm products like soybeans, corn, wheat, cotton, and pork. Why? Because it's politically sensitive and economically effective.
Already, groups like the National Corn Growers Association and the American Soybean Association are bracing for impact. As one member of the latter told The New York Times, farmers don't want handouts but rather "access to a free and fair trade market."
What they're getting instead is uncertainty, falling commodity prices, and the very real possibility of being shut out of long-cultivated markets as global buyers turn to Brazil, Argentina, and the European Union. Indeed, before the retaliating even starts, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins said the U.S. Department of Agriculture will support farmers while tariffs go into place. The rest of us won't be that lucky.
The 2018-20 tariffs raised consumer prices for goods like washing machines, cars, and electronics. According to economists at the Federal Reserve and several universities, American consumers bore nearly the full cost, while protected domestic industries captured only modest benefits.
With a much broader set of tariffs now on the table, lower-income families who spend the largest shares of their income on goods—and who have been badly hurt from the recent inflation—will likely suffer the most. That's a dangerous proposition in an economy already wrestling with persistent cost-of-living pressures.
Here's where things go from damaging to disastrous: If the administration follows through with both expensive new tariffs and more bailouts while simultaneously extending expiring tax cuts and adding new tax breaks without corresponding spending cuts, the result will be a fiscal black hole.
It's true that Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency are cutting spending and that the administration is rolling back many of the costly regulations inflicted by the Biden administration. It also wants to free the energy sector and generate more energy abundance. But it will take a long time to realize the benefits of these efforts, if they ever materialize. After all, many of these changes require congressional action, and Congress of late has been missing in action.
Trump's tariff strategy is worse than a gamble; it's a sure-fire loser. Experience proves that policies motivated by economic nationalism are all pain and no gain. The details of the long-run damage remain to be revealed. However, in the short term, we know for a fact that Liberation Day will hurt farmers, burden consumers, and further bloat the budget deficit—all oh-so-misleadingly in the name of "America First."
What America really needs are open markets, fiscal responsibility, and stable trade relationships—not a rerun and enlargement of the last trade war.
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Fuck Donald Trump!
So original!
Meh, was always good enough for me when Biden tried to force his unconstitutional bullshit.
"Keep it simple stupid" works for me at the moment.
How come you guys never address the 'tariffs as policy tools' argument the administration is making?
We get it - tariffs are bad economics. So is war - but sometimes its necessary to do hard things now to make things easier later.
Tariffs are like bazookas, with a terrible back blast which everyone concerned had better be aware of. The tariff back blasts are raising prices, giving the government more money to spend, and replacing individual liberty with collective government one-size-fits-nobody idiocy.
No one would recruit 5-year-olds into their army, nor give them all bazookas. But it's the only weapon Trump knows. He is a 5-year-old economic moron.
How come you guys never address the 'tariffs as policy tools' argument the administration is making?
I'm guessing it's because that argument is demonstrably dishonest. Why would there be a 10% baseline tariff and a dishonest method to calculate tariffs against us.
We repeatedly saw comments from Trumpists trumpeting how Trump trumped us neverTrumper anti-tariff types by getting several nations to lower/remove tariffs in the past few days, like Israel and Vietnam. Both are getting reciprocal tariffs and Vietnam, especially, is getting hammered.
“ How come you guys never address the 'tariffs as policy tools' argument the administration is making?”
Because it’s bullshit and everyone knows it?
Remember, in the extraordinary event that this works exactly like he says it will and tariffs disappear, jobs will continue to go overseas.
The only way tariffs help protect American jobs is if they remain indefinitely. And that will cost every consumer a LOT of money for a tiny gain in manufacturing jobs.
Ah yes, the manufacturing jobs myth.
A century ago half the population was farmers, now it's two percent. Does that mean we don't produce any food? Of course not, we produce more food than ever.
Well the same applies to manufacturing. Manufacturing jobs peaked in the 1970 and have declined ever since. Yet manufacturing output has never been higher. Why? What happened in the 1980s? Computers and automation. Factory floors are filled with robots and machines, not workers. The people who work in manufacturing feed, program and maintain the machines. And the machines do all the work.
The enemy of manufacturing jobs is automation, not foreigners.
Stop emoting and learn some facts.
GenZ yearns for the factory floor!
GenZ has somehow morphed "fuck off slaver" to "okay boomer". Doesn't quite pack the same punch.
Not really correct, we hemorrhaged manufacturing jobs to China from 2002-2009…many of those jobs could have been saved had Trump won in 2000. That said, we’ve added manufacturing jobs since 2010 and so Trump seems stuck in the past.
And here we see Nelson intentionally ignoring the 1.2T in announced investments because the end of Nelson's thinking is whatever Maddow last said lol.
Your willingness to bring up completely unrelated topics would astound me if I thought you realized they were unrelated. People invest trillions in America on a regular basis. That has nothing to do with tariffs (or lack thereof). It’s called business as usual.
You don't mess around with the world trading system as a "policy tool". If there is a real economic need for a tariff (rare), then fine, but they are not a negotiation tactic, or a way to bully countries.
And here we see another retard who doesn't understand countries have been messing around with glinal trade systems for decades.
It is amazing how ignorant most of you are.
I remember you writing past well thought out pieces
2022: BIDENFLATION IS KILLING AMERICA!
2025: Only leftists complain about higher prices.
This is how we tax the middle and lower classes.
I wonder if they'll figure it out.
Sales tax. Property tax. Btw, every good and service you purchase in America includes someone else’s health care costs and the higher the salary the better health care coverage and so well to do Americans benefit from that VAT. And that’s why Biden’s subsidies to manufacturers to reshore jobs makes more sense—federal taxpayers pick up the subsidies and federal taxpayers tend to be higher income Americans. Tariffs will hit lower income Americans which will end up being a regressive tax.
Is that the middle class now reliant on government help whose share of the economy has dropped from 50% to 20% of the economy? Ever increasing welfare rolls? Towering consumer debt?
How does offshoring good jobs to other countries then importing more low wage replacement workers help the middle class? Why is welfare steadily increasing?
That is the most random collection of unrelated gibberish you’ve written about tariffs yet. And most of what you’ve written is unrelated gibberish.
How does offshoring good jobs to other countries then importing more low wage replacement workers help the middle class?
Most people in this country don't think minimum wage jobs making toasters in a factory are good jobs you stupid fucking idiot. Your dream of recreating the 1950's is fucking stupid, like you.
Why is welfare steadily increasing?
It's not, you lying cunt. Post-covid, welfare as a percent of GDP is as low or lower than it has been since 1980. At least try to make a good faith argument.
Lower-income families who spend the largest shares of their income on goods—and who have been badly hurt from the recent inflation—will likely suffer the most.
It'll be especially bad when they're fired from their government jobs (*check*) and they stop getting their welfare checks. Better hope we do some job creation, and that they then take those jobs and start contributing to society.
Otherwise, kinda OK with them starving.
Considering all the shitty policies economists have foisted off on us in the name of "it's good for the economy!", I'm prepared to give Trump the benefit of the doubt.
I agree except Biden did a better job implementing the America First agenda than Trump’s first term. Trump should have just continued Biden’s subsidies to manufacturers which were working fine. But the economists that supported Bush’s make China great again agenda should be ignored. And the people that voted for Bush in 2004 deep down know they fucked up and were hardest hit by Bush’s globalist agenda.