As of this moment, no one has seen any pricing impact on any goods as a result of the tariffs. Everything people are talking about here is theory because it hasn't happened yet.
They are talking about it because it has happened before. Trade wars are doubly damaging - to both parties. Proven time and time again. You haven't seen pricing issues yet because it takes weeks or months for raw materials to be turned into finished products. Wait until the 2019 cars and trucks are announced. If this tariff remains in place you will see the results then.
They are framing this as an anti trump issue by claiming only negative things will happen as if we have had such great success already. Now I am a simple guy, not well educated by some standards and in my world and what I can see from my world, things are going very well. In my business, I am seeing better numbers than at any time in my career, poeple are going back to work in manufacturing, not just retail. In 2008 Pres. ***** stood at the Chrysler plant in Twinsburg, OH and told us that nothing would change in the auto world. Now that plant has been closed, torn down and is now a shipping facility, the Ford engine plant in Brookpark, OH is 1/3 the size it was in 2008. I don't know how to explain those things. Here in Ohio, the steel plant in Cleveland LTV Steel closed in the early 2000's, it reopened several years later under ISG and is now Arcelor Mittal. I don't know how many people it employes but 3 of them are in my family. It was announced last week the Republic Steel will reopen it's Lorain, OH plant and put 1000 people to work in that plant.
Not one of those events you documented was by government directive. Those are all private companies and they constantly shift workloads and production to meet deadlines, cost of production, staffing and other economic factors. Those are all normal events in the manufacturing world.
I know when some people talk about jobs they only talk about health care, tech sector jobs ones that require high amounts of education or training or retail jobs, they don't talk about manufacturing or trades. It's these jobs that lifted america into it's position on the top of the world and anything that can make the middle class stronger is a good thing in my book. Will some people get richer, absolutely. But so what. Just my two cents. Chris
Manufacturing got the USA on top because of WWII. Every other industrialized country in the world was devastated. Germany and Japan were bombed into rubble. The USSR had moved almost its entire heavy manufacturing capacity beyond the Ural mountains to prevent the Germans from bombing it. The UK still had a great deal of its manufacturing capability but it was so far in debt it could not afford to modernize. China had no significant manufacturing at all. The USA wound up #1 by default. The post war recovery changed all that. Japan and Germany were rebuilt. The USSR and China emerged. We were suddenly in competition with our Allies and found our standard of living was pricing us out of markets.