Opinion

Yahoo Finance
Commentary: Inflation would be licked, if not for the Trump tariffs

President Trump could be basking in a huge W. While campaigning last year, he promised to bring prices down rapidly. He could now claim that he’s done it. Inflation fell to 2.3% in April, which is basically in the normal range. Most prices have stabilized. Some are declining. The inflation shock that began in 2021 is over.

But another inflation shock may be coming, thanks to Trump himself.

While Trump has dialed back his most aggressive tariffs on imports, substantial tariffs still remain in place. And most economists expect those tariffs, which are a tax on imports, to raise costs in coming months and bring on a bout of reinflation.

Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet

Markets soared on May 12 after Trump and China agreed to deescalate their trade war and lower sky-high tariffs that had been in place for a month. But that was not a return to normal. There’s still a new 30% tariff on most Chinese imports. And that’s not final. The current agreement is only in place until August. The mercurial Trump could still push tariffs higher.

There’s also a new 10% tax on imports from most other countries. Plus a new 25% tax on imported steel, aluminum, and automobiles. Overall, the average import tax has risen from 2.5% before Trump took office to about 18%. Americans will pay the extra cost through higher prices.

Some economists thought tariff price hikes would show up in the April inflation data. They didn’t. That suggests US importers did a good job building inventories before the tariffs went into effect and have been able to keep retail prices under control.

But higher prices are coming. Moody’s Analytics expects year-over-year inflation to jump to 3.8% by June. Goldman Sachs forecasts peak inflation of 3.6% in 2025. Other forecasts are similar.

That’s not nearly as bad as the 9% inflation that seared consumers in 2022. But inflation drifting back toward 4% is still problematic. The Yale Budget Lab estimates that an overall price jump of just 1.7% will lower the average household’s purchasing power by $2,800 per year. Since tariff inflation will affect many everyday products, it will hit lower-income people harder on a proportional basis.

Prices will jump most for products that come from China, which now face the highest tariffs. The Yale Budget Lab forecasts price hikes of 15% for leather goods such as handbags, 14% for clothing and electronics, 11% for textiles, and 9% for automobiles and basic pharmaceuticals. Those are expected price hikes for all products in the US market, not just imports; that’s because higher import prices generally allow domestic manufacturers to raise their prices too.