U.S. consumers to pay 55% of tariff costs, Goldman Sachs says
U.S. consumers will end up paying the bulk of the cost for President Donald Trump’s tariffs, according to a report from Goldman Sachs.
The report undercuts repeated claims from the White House that foreign nations will pay the costs of the new import duties.
Goldman Sachs economists said American consumers will pay 55% of tariff costs, U.S. businesses will pay 22% and foreign exporters will pay 18%.
Goldman Sachs economists said U.S. firms are expected to pass costs onto consumers in the coming months, according to media reports.
“At the moment, however, U.S. businesses are likely bearing a larger share of the costs because some tariffs have just gone into effect and it takes time to raise prices on consumers and negotiate lower import prices with foreign suppliers,” the Goldman Sachs note said.
The Trump administration has repeatedly said that foreign governments would pay the tariffs.
“The President and Administration’s position has always been clear: while Americans may face a transition period from tariffs upending a broken status quo that has put America Last, the cost of tariffs will ultimately be borne by foreign exporters,” White House Spokesman Kush Desai said. “Companies are already shifting and diversifying their supply chains in response to tariffs, including by onshoring production to the United States.”
The White also blamed high prices on former President Joe Biden.
“Americans can rest assured that the Administration will continue to deliver economic relief from Joe Biden’s inflation crisis while laying the groundwork for a long-term restoration of American Greatness,” Desai said
The White House has previously denied that tariffs would raise consumer prices or that American companies would bear the higher costs.
“The reality is the president has always maintained that Chinese producers will be absorbing the cost of these tariffs,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said during a briefing in May. “The president is committed to ensuring that prices remain low for American consumers andhe maintains the position that foreign countries will absorb these tariffs.”
Trump has told businesses that he doesn’t want them to raise prices. He wants businesses to absorb the loss without passing on the higher prices to consumers.
Shortly after Walmart announced that it would raise prices throughout its stores in May, Trump told the world’s largest retailer to “eat it.”
Economists, businesses and some publicly traded companies have warned that tariffs could raise prices on a wide range of consumer products.
Trump has said he wants to use tariffs to restore manufacturing jobs lost to lower-wage countries in decades past, shift the tax burden away from U.S. families, and pay down the national debt.
A tariff is a tax on imported goods paid by the person or company that imports the goods. The importer can absorb the cost of the tariffs or try to pass the cost on to consumers through higher prices.
Latest News Stories
Noem refuses Pritzker enforcement pause request, IL passes sanctuary enhancement
WATCH: Energy bill opponents say increases IL electric bills by $8 billion passes
WA Dems blame GOP for government shutdown; 1 million in state could lose SNAP benefits
Officials react to allegations of civilians impersonating ICE
Illinois quick hits: IL taxpayers have highest pension debt obligations in U.S.
WATCH: Bonta visits food bank amid lawsuit over CalFresh
IL taxpayers to pay $20M for food banks as SNAP funding lapses start Saturday
Poll: 7 in 10 of Americans are against mail-order abortion without a doctor visit
Trump’s plan to re-start nuclear weapons testing faces criticism
Illinois quick hits: Corrections director appointment approved; Clean Slate Act passes
Tyler Robinson’s in-person hearing delayed to January
WATCH: Clean Slate Act passes Illinois legislature despite opposition