BusinessPostCorner.com
No Result
View All Result
Thursday, July 16, 2026
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Accounting
  • Tax
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Crypto News
  • Human Resources
BusinessPostCorner.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Accounting
  • Tax
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Crypto News
  • Human Resources
No Result
View All Result
BusinessPostCorner.com
No Result
View All Result

The case for Trump’s tariffs looks strong a year on from ‘liberation day’

April 2, 2026
in Finance
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
The case for Trump’s tariffs looks strong a year on from ‘liberation day’
ShareShareShareShareShare

Stay informed with free updates

Simply sign up to the US economy myFT Digest — delivered directly to your inbox.

The writer is an FT contributing editor, chief economist at American Compass and writes the Understanding America newsletter 

A year has passed since President Donald Trump appeared in the White House Rose Garden to announce sweeping tariffs on US imports. “Liberation day” marked a dramatic turning point for the international economic system and its seemingly inexorable march towards lower trade barriers and global integration. The results have been remarkable.

The past year has also proved as disruptive to the discipline of economics and the overconfidence of its most prominent practitioners as it has been to supply chains. The folly of tariffs was among their most deeply held beliefs, hard-coded into their models, proudly professed in every interview. Tariffs, they insisted, would lead to sharply higher inflation and much slower growth, a likely recession and millions of jobs lost. They would prompt retaliation and lead to appreciation of the dollar, crippling exporters and leading to further deindustrialisation.

But none of this happened. The dollar weakened. Countries came to the table rather than retaliating and reached agreements favourable to the US. Inflation slowed, logging an increase in the price level of 2.4 per cent over the past 12 months, as compared to 2.8 per cent for the previous year. Real GDP growth accelerated, up an annualised 2.9 per cent over the last three quarters of 2025, as compared to 2.5 per cent in 2024.

Tellingly, the response from doomsayers has not been to admit error, but rather to argue that they would have expected strong economic performance given the president’s many revisions to the tariff policy. The retroactive tolerance for robust protectionism underscores the extent to which the old orthodoxy has collapsed and the window for new thinking opened.

The manufacturing sector began to respond as well. Demand for capital equipment grew faster after “liberation day” than in 2024, and faster still over the past three months. Industrial output, which had declined over the past decade and fell 0.3 per cent in 2024, has posted a 1.6 per cent gain. Surveys of purchasing managers by the Institute for Supply Management and S&P Global have found increasing optimism among manufacturers. Anna Wong, chief US economist for Bloomberg, confirmed the overwhelmingly positive data last week, noting that it is “corroborated by a very strong signal from the latest earning transcripts” and also that “tariffs probably played a role”.

To deny that reality, opponents of tariffs have seized on the decline in manufacturing employment as the metric that matters and proof that the project is failing. But they are doubly wrong: First, the trend has in fact improved. As compared to the sector’s 167,000 jobs lost in the 11 months prior to “liberation day”, losses in the comparable period since have been only 93,000.

Second, employment is a lagging indicator of re-industrialisation, a process that will take years. No one should expect producers to respond to tariff announcements by going on a hiring spree. Nor is the workforce in place, after decades of neglect, to fill new positions quickly. At the one-year mark, the question is whether the costs and disruptions have been manageable, whether demand and output are up, whether producers are proceeding with investment plans, not “where are the millions of jobs?”

Meanwhile, manufacturing job openings, which had been plummeting for several years, levelled off after “liberation day” and have since jumped higher, which is how a halt to the sector’s slide and the green shoots of expansion would look. Add together manufacturing jobs and job openings, as a measure of potential employment, and the decline has slowed to less than one-eighth the rate in 2024, and turned to a gain over the past three months.

The importance of focusing on the early indicators in this first year also underscores the long journey ahead. The comical collapse of the anti-tariff case gives the strategy a chance to succeed — apparently President Bill Clinton was wrong when he declared, “protectionism is simply not an option because globalisation is irreversible”. The US can choose another path.

But continuing down that path in year two will require intensive focus on investment and workforce. Capital investment has held steady thus far, but it has not yet surged, and now it must. The Trump administration needs to provide a stable tariff regime and pursue permanent legislation so that producers can invest with confidence, and create an intelligible process for facilitating the enormous foreign investment commitments by Japan and Korea. It also needs to prime the talent pipeline for productive workers, with funding for the schools, unions and employers who can get that job done.

Economists often observe the real world and ask, “but does it work in theory?” Globalisation worked flawlessly in theory, but failed in fact. On this first anniversary of “liberation day”, the alternative is showing greater promise.

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendPinShare
Previous Post

JLR sees sales recover after cyber attack

Next Post

CLA adds two firms | Accounting Today

Next Post
CLA adds two firms | Accounting Today

CLA adds two firms | Accounting Today

Debate: Do HSAs address healthcare affordability gaps?

Debate: Do HSAs address healthcare affordability gaps?

July 10, 2026
LinkedIn: Why AI is changing work, and how workers can prepare

LinkedIn: Why AI is changing work, and how workers can prepare

July 13, 2026
The rise of white-collar socialists: ‘A lot of tech workers are working class’

The rise of white-collar socialists: ‘A lot of tech workers are working class’

July 11, 2026
Zelenskyy dismisses Ukraine’s prime minister in cabinet shake-up

Zelenskyy dismisses Ukraine’s prime minister in cabinet shake-up

July 12, 2026
China economic growth falls sharply, missing target

China economic growth falls sharply, missing target

July 15, 2026
This former U.S. soccer player built a  billion-a-year company, but he says resilience matters more than talent

This former U.S. soccer player built a $20 billion-a-year company, but he says resilience matters more than talent

July 12, 2026
BusinessPostCorner.com

BusinessPostCorner.com is an online news portal that aims to share the latest news about following topics: Accounting, Tax, Business, Finance, Crypto, Management, Human resources and Marketing. Feel free to get in touch with us!

Recent News

AI won’t kill offshoring; it will supercharge it

AI won’t kill offshoring; it will supercharge it

July 16, 2026
Best enterprise rank tracking software for high-traffic websites

Best enterprise rank tracking software for high-traffic websites

July 16, 2026

Our Newsletter!

Loading
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2023 businesspostcorner.com - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Accounting
  • Tax
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Crypto News
  • Human Resources

© 2023 businesspostcorner.com - All Rights Reserved!