Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Tariffs are likely to stay high even if Harris wins. But Trump could send them into the stratosphere.

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Yahoo Finance is spending the final days of the 2024 campaign examining key economic decisions that, like it or not, will confront the next president. For an even deeper look at all of the financial issues that matter most to your pocketbook, please see Yahoo Finance’s interactive guide to the 2024 election.

One of Donald Trump’s most remarkable accomplishments in office was how he reoriented the political landscape around trade and tariffs, ushering in a new era of higher duties that have persisted and even grown slightly during the Biden administration.

The decision facing voters in this election is whether he will be able to upend the status quo again.

Vice President Kamala Harris and her aides have offered little detail on her trade plans, but if she makes any moves at all, she is widely expected to keep the Trump-created new normal of higher duties in place — with a possible focus on new duties on “strategic sectors.”

Trump, by contrast, is promising a new wave in the ballpark of 10 times the level of tariffs he put in place in his first term, experts said, with a plan that includes across-the-board tariffs of 10% or higher and 60% tariffs on China.

Yahoo Finance photo illustration (Images: Getty Images)

He is also promising things like a Trump Reciprocal Trade Act that would automatically put tariffs on nations in response to their duties on the US.

The effects would be felt across American life, even if Trump delivers on just a fraction of his promises.

One thing that appears off the table, at least for now, is a lowering of duties anytime soon.

“Cutting tariffs is not in the cards for anybody,” Richard Baldwin, a professor of International Economics at the International Institute for Management Development, said in a recent interview.

Baldwin added of Trump’s promises that “I think we have to take him at his word,” noting that he has the power to levy his tariff regime unilaterally.

For Harris, a likelihood of maintaining the ‘new normal’

During his term in office, then-President Trump imposed duties on a wide array of products from China as well as things like aluminum and steel products from Europe and Asia.

It marked about $80 billion in new duties, which companies pay at US ports of entry.

The Biden administration largely left Trump’s tariffs in place and even announced new duties this May on “strategic sectors” such as semiconductors and electric vehicles.

Harris is expected to continue this general approach and has unveiled a reindustrialization strategy aimed at encouraging specific sectors in the US — from aerospace to AI to quantum computing to critical minerals.

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