Recent Posts

Friday, May 16, 2025

Trump Folded, Uncertainty Remains

Uncertainty got the upper hand this weak. President Trump removed one certainty from the outlook — the U.S. economy would be wrecked by his de facto embargo of China — but we now are uncertain as to how bad a 30% Chinese tariff will be, and we also do not know what happens when the 90 day grace period is up. Meanwhile, the White House has indicated that he will start unilaterally imposing tariff rates within a week. Since Trump appears to get great satisfaction from changing tariff rates, and there is no sign that any country other than the U.K. is interested in his “deals,” he might as well go back to governing via posting tariff rate changes on social media.

(I was planning to get a note out earlier this week, but home ownership intervened.)

I was probably too pessimistic about the U.S. outlook, but the rapidity of Trump folding may allow a lot of firms to wiggle out of existing orders that were trapped in China during the grace period. Nevertheless, logistics are going to be snarled, and uncertainty about American policy remains. Nobody other than autocratic governments is going to want to deal with the policy uncertainty, and other developed countries will continue their policy of decoupling from exposure to America.

If we assume that the damage from the logistics snarl will be contained, we should expect the delayed effects of tariffs to work their way into the hard data. Walmart just warned that some prices would need to rise, and that should be expected to continue.

Email subscription: Go to https://bondeconomics.substack.com/ 

(c) Brian Romanchuk 2024

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Posts are manually moderated, with a varying delay. Some disappear.

The comment section here is largely dead. My Substack or Twitter are better places to have a conversation.

Given that this is largely a backup way to reach me, I am going to reject posts that annoy me. Please post lengthy essays elsewhere.