Finance International News Opinons Trade

Stop Lying To Me About Trump’s Tariffs

Can people please stop talking complete, unmitigated claptrap on the subject of President Donald Trump, Mexican tariffs, and the U.S. economy? Is it really too much to ask?

The panic over the last few days about possible Mexican tariffs is even more ridiculous than the panic we had last month about the China tariffs — and that was bad enough.

Trump’s new tariff threat will send prices soaring for U.S. households, say the doomsayers. They’ll cost hundreds of thousands of jobs. They’ll crash the stock market. They’ll crash the economy.


Really? No doubt this is why the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.60%   plunged 350 points in a panic on Friday. And the Dow’s performance since then through Wednesday? Up around 600 points.


Grieving moms dig with ‘bare hands’ to unearth the dark truth behind their missing and murdered children
Detectives’ true crime podcast helps dig up breakthrough in case that haunted family: ‘drew audible gasp’
Florida man, 89, and his dog mauled to death by black bear in state’s first fatal attack
FBI Deputy Director Bongino: Illegal alien criminals and child predators are next in ongoing crackdown
Mike Rowe Compares Modern Dem Policy to Slavery: ‘No Different’
Democratic senator says there ‘needs to be space’ for Fetterman in party as Republicans come to his defense
Trump says ‘total reset negotiated’ with China during tariff talks in Geneva
Two injured after military vehicle crashes over highway retaining wall, plunges 30 feet onto road below
DHS says ‘arrests are still on the table’ after New Jersey House Dems caught on camera ‘storming’ ICE facility
ICE facility Democrats ‘stormed’ holds child rapists, murderers: officials
Inside the White House’s effort to pull India, Pakistan back from the brink of war
Vatican unveils Pope Leo XIV’s coat of arms and official portrait
Head of UK Royal Navy Suspended, Investigation Underway
Trump Announces National Center for Homeless Vets to Be Paid for with Funds Previously Used to House Illegal Immigrants
Watch: Police Officers Put in Nightmare Position as 7-Year-Old Points Loaded Gun at Them
See also  Newark airport communications meltdown renews demands for FAA slot controls

The Standard & Poor’s 500 SPX, +0.54%   is now higher than it was last Thursday, just before Trump shook his little fist at the Mexicans. And it’s not just the popular stocks such as Apple AAPL, +1.09%   Netflix NFLX, +0.13%  , and TSLA, +4.54%   U.S. industrial stocks — as measured by the S&P 1500 Industrials index — are up 3%. The stocks of automobile components companies are up almost 5%. Small company stocks, often a useful barometer for the domestic, Main Street economy, are up about 1.5%, whether measured by the broad Russell 2000 RUT, -0.49%   or the narrower, higher-quality S&P 600 index SML, -0.63%  .

Sure, a few days’ stock market action doesn’t mean much long term. And the stock market isn’t America. But then again, apparently it was an Infallible Omen of Doom when the stock market fell on Friday. You see how that works?

Whether or not these tariffs are a sensible policy is another matter. But anyone claiming they will cost households a small fortune and wipe out vast numbers of jobs is relying on some heroic assumptions. Or, as non-economists call them: guesses.

U.S. imports from Mexico came to $372 billion last year, according to the federal government. So slapping a 5% tariff on them amounts to a federal tax hike of… er… $19 billion. Total federal taxes last year: $3.3 trillion. So we’re talking about a 0.6% tax hike.

But the Mexican peso USDMXN, +0.4490%  has already reacted. It has weakened by 2.7% against the U.S. dollar DXY, -0.30%  in a few days — wiping out more than half of that cost increase.

See also  Cardinals enter Sistine Chapel for papal conclave under total digital lockdown

Grieving moms dig with ‘bare hands’ to unearth the dark truth behind their missing and murdered children
Detectives’ true crime podcast helps dig up breakthrough in case that haunted family: ‘drew audible gasp’
Florida man, 89, and his dog mauled to death by black bear in state’s first fatal attack
FBI Deputy Director Bongino: Illegal alien criminals and child predators are next in ongoing crackdown
Mike Rowe Compares Modern Dem Policy to Slavery: ‘No Different’
Democratic senator says there ‘needs to be space’ for Fetterman in party as Republicans come to his defense
Trump says ‘total reset negotiated’ with China during tariff talks in Geneva
Two injured after military vehicle crashes over highway retaining wall, plunges 30 feet onto road below
DHS says ‘arrests are still on the table’ after New Jersey House Dems caught on camera ‘storming’ ICE facility
ICE facility Democrats ‘stormed’ holds child rapists, murderers: officials
Inside the White House’s effort to pull India, Pakistan back from the brink of war
Vatican unveils Pope Leo XIV’s coat of arms and official portrait
Head of UK Royal Navy Suspended, Investigation Underway
Trump Announces National Center for Homeless Vets to Be Paid for with Funds Previously Used to House Illegal Immigrants
Watch: Police Officers Put in Nightmare Position as 7-Year-Old Points Loaded Gun at Them

Meanwhile, anyone hoping to buy a home, or refinance their home loan, also just got a nice cost saving. The trade tensions have sent long-term interest rates tumbling. Average 30-year mortgage rates have declined to 3.89% from 4.01% in just a few days, according to Mortgage News Daily. The interest savings from that move alone on an average new home loan comes to about $300 a year. According to Bankrate, 30-year mortgage rates are now about their lowest since the summer of 2017.

See also  Bowser unveils economic agenda for DC and pushes to repeal controversial wage tips law

Oh, and then there’s the matter of that $19 billion in tariff revenues. To hear some people, you’d think it just vanishes. Maybe it gets trucked to a Great Secret Money Bonfire — possibly in Area 51 — where it gets torched. (Along with the money raised from the China tariffs, money spent by companies on stock buybacks, and so on).

Actually, if Uncle Sam levies $19 billion in extra taxes on imports from Mexico, then he has extra money that he can recycle back into the U.S. economy through spending, or tax cuts. How much? Try $19 billion.

Story cited here.

Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter