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Why the President’s tariff policy makes economic sense and will benefit US citizens

1. ✅ Tariff Revenue Increases Directly

Trump’s tariffs are essentially a tax on foreign goods:
• With broad 10%–60% tariffs across multiple sectors, the U.S. is now collecting record levels of revenue from imports.
• Estimated annual tariff revenue in 2025 is $300–$500 billion.
• This reduces the need for new taxes or borrowing, helping to stabilize federal finances.

Key takeaway: Tariffs are one of the few federal policies that raise revenue without taxing U.S. citizens directly.



2. ✅ Reindustrialization → Higher GNP

Tariffs protect U.S. industries, encouraging domestic manufacturing and reshoring, which leads to:
• Job growth in high-value sectors (steel, autos, electronics)
• A broader domestic supply chain
• More capital investment at home

If successful, this raises Gross National Product (GNP):
• GNP = GDP + net income from abroad
• If foreign companies build more plants in the U.S. to avoid tariffs, foreign-owned income becomes part of U.S. GNP.
• Domestic firms gain market share, leading to higher wages, productivity, and output.

Realistic projection: GNP could rise by 0.5–1% over 5 years if enough production is reshored.



3. ✅ Stronger Wage Base → Higher Income Tax Revenue

Rebuilding industry at home could:
• Boost blue-collar and mid-skill job wages
• Create a more balanced income distribution, helping labor rather than just capital
• Increase taxable wages and salaries

The result: More income tax revenue, especially from workers and small businesses.



4. ✅ Trade Deficit Shrinks → Measured GDP Improves

In GDP accounting:
• Imports are subtracted
• So if tariffs reduce imports (which they have), GDP rises on paper, even before any real production increase

Even critics admit that tariffs can cause a GDP bump, especially when domestic producers fill the gap.



5. ✅ Negotiating Leverage → Better Trade Terms

Trump’s team argues that:
• Tariffs are a tool to force better trade deals
• Other countries will lower their own tariffs/subsidies in response

If successful, this could lead to:
• Fairer trade conditions
• U.S. exports becoming more competitive
• Long-run growth in net exports, boosting both GDP and GNP



🧮 Realistic Scenario: 5-Year Economic Impact (Stylized Example)

🚨 Important Assumptions

This outcome depends on:
• U.S. industries using protection wisely to modernize
• Limited retaliation from trade partners
• Domestic supply chains scaling up quickly
• Consumers absorbing slightly higher prices without cutting demand sharply in exchange for lower income taxes, more secure Social Security and Medicare and steady reduction in the deficit reducing interest payments and providing more dollars to directly benefit US citizens.
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WandererTony · 56-60, M
Its a correction of a situation where America was exploited. However, there is the risk of America getting left out as nations trade with others rather than America. US has to realise that trade helped get them stuff cheap. Tariff will reduce supplies and increase prices. Will hit the consumer this way or that.
carpediem · 61-69, M
@WandererTony So many of our "friends" have been and continue to practice trade policy detrimental to the US. With friends like that.... who needs enemies? True friends will understand they should have opened up their own markets decades ago. This new trade policy will re-shore manufacturing and strengthen our domestic supply chains. That is more important than "cheap stuff". Most foreign sourced cheap stuff is garbage anyway.
So far the out of control inflation used as a scare tactic by the left has not materialized. The US is by far the best market to sell goods in the world. No country is willing to lose access to it. I agree that for the most part what other countries sell us is cr. Take TEMU as an example. Quality items like German automobiles also come with exorbitant maintenance and repair cost buyer beware. On the other hand, Toyotas and Hondas manufactured in the US have the same reasonably price maintenance and repair costs as traditional US brands. @WandererTony @carpediem
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The readers know that everything you write has zero merit. @PicturesOfABetterTomorrow