Expect Active Trump Administration on Tariffs, Trade During 2025

Uncertainty and disruption are the key takeaways from the impact of the 2024 U.S. presidential election with regard to trade policies, with tariffs and de minimis the top issues of concern.

Despite the uncertainties ahead, trade executives were clear about the need to engage the incoming Trump administration to mitigate risks and ensure strategic support for the industry at large.

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Regarding tariff uncertainties, Matt Priest, president and CEO of the Footwear Distributors & Retailers of America, said “The sky’s the limit.” He was on a panel discussion on “Unpacking The Election” at the SJ Fall Summit. The panel included Kim Glas, president and CEO of the National Council of Textile Organizations, and was moderated by SJ senior news and features editor Kate Nishimura.

Priest said the numbers bandied about during the campaign have ranged from 60 percent to as high as 200 percent. “First and foremost, we’ve noticed in September of this year import numbers [up] about 13 percent year-over-year. So there’s been a lot of conversation about our industries or companies front loading to get ahead of the curve,” Priest said, adding that the “vast majority of our vendors” are thinking about doing it. Another big question for the footwear industry centers on how to price out product that’s going to come in next year when there’s uncertainty over what the tariff rates will be.

Glas spoke about how the domestic textiles industry is hurting, noting that “We are the canary in the coal mine for how other industries are feeling.” She noted that over the last 18 months, 22 plants that survived the Great Depression, Great Recession and the COVID pandemic shuttered because they could not survive the “onslaught of subsidized, cheap imports coming into the United States.”

She referenced Robert Lighthizer as the USTR during Trump’s first administration, who was very aggressive on trade issues, as well as Trump’s promise to hold China accountable. And while tariffs and making countries accountable for certain practices would help the domestic textiles industry, who will be the next trade czar is key, adding that an across the board tariff would create uncertainty for the sector. Glas was quick to note that brands and retailers looking to diversify and source from the Western hemisphere should consider sourcing more from the U.S. and the “50 other resources from our trade agreement countries and preference countries.”