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Buttoneer

(652 posts)
Sat Nov 16, 2024, 05:46 PM Nov 16

Trump Taxes (Tariffs) I believe corporations will increase prices until Biden leaves office in preparation of higher

prices under Trump. Biden will get blamed for the inflation over the last two months of his administration, and will cushion the inflation numbers when Trump raises tariffs.

Or, Trump won't implement the tariffs and will be credited for bringing inflation down.

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Trump Taxes (Tariffs) I believe corporations will increase prices until Biden leaves office in preparation of higher (Original Post) Buttoneer Nov 16 OP
This is precisely whats happening gay texan Nov 16 #1
The cost of a taxes is effectively shared by buyer and seller unblock Nov 16 #2
It won't matter. Even 4 years from now, Trump will blame everything on Biden/Harris. PeaceWave Nov 16 #3

gay texan

(2,864 posts)
1. This is precisely whats happening
Sat Nov 16, 2024, 05:54 PM
Nov 16

I went to the grocery store today and everything was up by quite a bit. Eggs have doubled, just arbitrary, out of the blue. They were normally 2.25 for a large dozen, now 4.40. I'm going to go back to my local free range egg suppliers.

I have a big project that i need metal for, and i'm cleaning out my savings to get it before the prices skyrocket.

unblock

(54,157 posts)
2. The cost of a taxes is effectively shared by buyer and seller
Sat Nov 16, 2024, 06:00 PM
Nov 16

The market adjusts. Say an item costs $100, then Donnie slaps a 10% tariff on it.

The seller can't sell as much at $100, which costs the customer $110, nor would it make sense to absorb all the damage by lowering the price to $90.91, which would make the cost to the customer back up $100.

So the seller will make the price somewhere in between, maybe $92, $95, $98, whatever, depending on what's optimal in the market (it depends on the elasticity of demand).

So *nominally*, prices will go down, allowing Donnie to claim a win on inflation, even though customers will have to pay more.


Yes it's more complicated for tariffs, domestic producers could in theory raise prices and still be selling at an effective discount against imports, but this assumes that the domestic producers don't use any raw materials that are themselves subject to tariffs.

It also assumes other countries don't retaliate.

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