One Year Later, Trump's Tariffs Have Failed

nytigerfan

Heisman
Dec 9, 2004
10,225
13,118
102
One year later, Trump’s tariffs didn’t deliver what was promised—they created the opposite. There is no way any rational person could disagree.

They were sold as a way to punish foreign countries and rebuild American industry. In reality, the costs landed at home. U.S. consumers and businesses ended up paying the majority of the tariffs through higher prices and tighter margins. While they generated some revenue, that was generated as a tax on the American people. And of course, we never saw those tariff checks we were promised.

Instead of strong trade wins, the result has been uncertainty. Companies have struggled to plan, supply chains have been disrupted, and global partners now view the U.S. as less reliable in trade negotiations.

There were also bold promises of a wave of new trade deals (90 deals in 90 days - did they just forget about that?). That surge never materialized. Even where agreements were announced, many were limited in scope or early-stage frameworks rather than fully negotiated, comprehensive deals.

The promised manufacturing boom and investment surge largely didn’t show up. Manufacturing jobs are DOWN significantly since Trump took office. According to reports citing BLS data as of early 2026, manufacturing employment fell by roughly 83,000 to 108,000 jobs during 2025. What did show up: higher costs, weaker credibility, and more instability in the global economy.

If the goal was to strengthen the U.S. economy, the data a year later suggests the tariff policy fell well short of expectations.

Here is a good article from the Council on Foreign Relations (not a liberal group).

 

tigres88

All-American
Aug 7, 2022
2,151
5,632
113
One year later, Trump’s tariffs didn’t deliver what was promised—they created the opposite. There is no way any rational person could disagree.

They were sold as a way to punish foreign countries and rebuild American industry. In reality, the costs landed at home. U.S. consumers and businesses ended up paying the majority of the tariffs through higher prices and tighter margins. While they generated some revenue, that was generated as a tax on the American people. And of course, we never saw those tariff checks we were promised.

Instead of strong trade wins, the result has been uncertainty. Companies have struggled to plan, supply chains have been disrupted, and global partners now view the U.S. as less reliable in trade negotiations.

There were also bold promises of a wave of new trade deals (90 deals in 90 days - did they just forget about that?). That surge never materialized. Even where agreements were announced, many were limited in scope or early-stage frameworks rather than fully negotiated, comprehensive deals.

The promised manufacturing boom and investment surge largely didn’t show up. Manufacturing jobs are DOWN significantly since Trump took office. According to reports citing BLS data as of early 2026, manufacturing employment fell by roughly 83,000 to 108,000 jobs during 2025. What did show up: higher costs, weaker credibility, and more instability in the global economy.

If the goal was to strengthen the U.S. economy, the data a year later suggests the tariff policy fell well short of expectations.

Here is a good article from the Council on Foreign Relations (not a liberal group).

I mean, clearly you don't understand how Trump works. It's all about leverage- he's a business man! Tariffs don't make a ton of sense (it was a Kamala idea anyway) but when you leverage them to make the world hate you, ruin all the trade deals around the world, and put the economic/repercussions on the average American, it TOTALLY makes sense.

Same with the war in Iran- its all about leverage, and letting Israel leverage deez nuts on America's forehead. Trump loves a good tea baggin, so much so that he let's Stephen Miller have Tea Bag Tuesday's in the Oval just the two of em every week!
 

bdgan

All-Conference
Oct 12, 2021
4,152
4,166
113
One year later, Trump’s tariffs didn’t deliver what was promised—they created the opposite. There is no way any rational person could disagree.
Rational people could definitely disagree. Raising $200b or so of additional revenue and more companies have made or are planning new manufacturing investments in the U.S. There are also downsides like higher prices for imported goods but it's not like it's all negative.
 

dpic73

Heisman
Jul 27, 2005
28,835
21,072
113
Rational people could definitely disagree. Raising $200b or so of additional revenue and more companies have made or are planning new manufacturing investments in the U.S. There are also downsides like higher prices for imported goods but it's not like it's all negative.
Who paid that $200b?
 

nytigerfan

Heisman
Dec 9, 2004
10,225
13,118
102
Rational people could definitely disagree. Raising $200b or so of additional revenue and more companies have made or are planning new manufacturing investments in the U.S. There are also downsides like higher prices for imported goods but it's not like it's all negative.

What companies are currently building or planning manufacturing in the US? Planning means they’re actually buying the real estate putting the plans in place not that they just told Trump they were gonna do that at some point. Can you name any of that were not already started prior to trump?
 
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