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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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Burnley123 · 41-45, M
The caveats at the end make the whole thing near redundant.

Tariffs could have worked as a long-term strategy and coupled with a carefully planned industrial policy. There is no such thing and this is why the Trump whitehouse is divided.

The last round of inflation was due to the COVID hangover. The next round will be self-inflicted

Blaming the deep state for inflation isn't going to work.
Who is blaming the deep state for inflation? No one. Blaming the deep state for lying cheating stealing of course. Everyone agrees with that. The century plus old economic policy was not working so far this one is. The left is desperately inflation wolf yet so far there is little. @Burnley123
Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@jackjjackson So far, being the operative words. There will be inflation and even the post you copied and pasted admits that.
Elessar · 31-35, M
@Burnley123 Shoo, with this catastrophist leftist vision of the economy; it's time to come back down to planet Earth and accept that elevating random, constantly changing trade barriers on virtually every foreign market is going to boost your own economy!

Can't you see how Russia and even more so North Korea have the strongest, most stable and most masculine economies in the world?? All thanks to Obama and sleepy Joe that made them stronger with those sanctions!
I personally think a little inflation in the short term is more than worth it to change the economic dynamic in the long term. @Burnley123
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson Ah yes, the "Joe Biden made the gas expensiver!!11!!1" crowd, now completely fine with inflation
Gas is less today during Biden’s whole term. @Elessar
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson Yeah, while everything else is gonna get more expensive lmao

Unless y'all evolve to eat petroleum, tariffing +35% Canadian potash is gonna make your groceries *at least* 35% more expensive
That’s what lol the leftists crying wolf claim 👀 @Elessar
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson It's simple arithmetic dude. Who do you think is gonna eat the extra cost, the producers? Lmao
Those who pay the tariffs are the seller’s. . @Elessar
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson Exactly. Who do you think will pay the tariff? The corporation that sells something for $100 won't depreciate it at $65 in order to give $35 to Trump lol; they'll simply charge the American customer $135, still earn their $100, and Trump's slice will come out of your pocket.

You've basically just gotten VAT.

Actually a much worse version of VAT, with the rate variable at any whim of the orange Caligula and on the basis of the country of origin. At least here we have a fixed 22% lol
Exactly the leftist crying wolf. @Elessar
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson Exactly the gullible rightist so detached from reality to believe that foreign corporations will depreciate their own products not to charge you extra lol
My grocery bill is less since January. @Elessar
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson Not what I'm reading from most of your fellow countrymen
Most? I think not. A few lying coastal elites crying wolf perhaps to get attention. @Elessar
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson Yeah in your fictional universe. Come back to the real world lmao, Trump's approval rate is not even 38%
Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@jackjjackson Dude, if there is no inflation you will proven right.

If there is limited inflation and industrialization with loads of new jobs created, you will be proven right.

You won't be proven right. Save this message to use against me in six months because by then, I'm predicting this will all have gone to shit. It might not even take that long.

I can see in a few months a scenario where inflation is out of control, no new jobs are arriving but Trump blames everyone but himself.
Explain why the EU and UK entered into the new rede deals they did with the US? @Burnley123
Elessar · 31-35, M
@jackjjackson I don't know about the British deal, but the EU's deal is engineered to be a PR win for Trump, whereas the only "binding" part is that tariffs get capped at 15%. VdL essentially promised several things that at best were already being bought without the deal (weapons and energy), at worst are absolutely non-enforceable (investments from the private sector in the American market; neither the member state nor even less so the EU as a whole have any saying in where private subjects will invest; at most we can limit via countertariffs, but not promote).

The idea is to give Trump the impression that he's gotten a bargain while in reality he's getting nothing more than he already had before.

Remember also that anything that VdL negotiates has to be ratified and voted by *every* member state; one single country vetoing the deal and the entire thing gets sacked. France has already made it clear that if the deal isn't beneficial to the EU they'll veto it, Spain is likely to follow (or even lead). In case of no-deal the EU has already got several instruments to take down the US economy along with ours, as a last resort. Remember that our market is ~500M buyers, yours is barely ~300M, if the EU enacts counter-measures (especially to things like digital services) you'll see the honeymoon between CEOs and the Republican party come to an end.
Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@jackjjackson Because Trump bullied them into it.

That it is a bad deal for us doesn't make it a good deal for you. It is bad for our exporters but it will raise prices for your consumers.

The tariffs on Brazil are about Bolsanaro. Good luck telling american swing voters that they gave to pay 30% more on coffee to keep Trump:s buddy out if jail!
The EU produces plenty of coffee. @Burnley123
Burnley123 · 41-45, M
@jackjjackson But you are tariffing that too. America gets a third of its coffee from Brazil.