US Tariff War

I suspect Dopey Donald would expect all the bits to be manufactured in the USA instead, might cause a few delays while they build the factories and find people with the skills like.
This has opened the door for Comac to replace Boeing as the second major aircraft manufacturer. Obviously not overnight but it will happen.
 
The responses are great - they just can't see it - "oh Apple doesn't need to make 50% profit on everything they won't do it" - in recent years large corporations have GOT USED to big profits and see it as their rights - we see it here with water companies - does anyone really think wangling larger rate rises really will result in new reservoirs, new sewage plants and investment? They will just continue to take huge rewards and dividends hiding behind the fact that planning laws cause delay - that it will all take time to work through the system. MAGA cultists are still deluding themselves.


I suspect you are absolutely correct, but it will be interesting to see if these big companies 'blink first' or do indeed just pass on 100% of added costs to the consumer. Also, if long term it does return manufacturing jobs to the US as the entire western world faces the same issues of deindustrialisation.
I'd personally like to thank trump for using his own country as the lab rat in this experiment.
 
I suspect you are absolutely correct, but it will be interesting to see if these big companies 'blink first' or do indeed just pass on 100% of added costs to the consumer. Also, if long term it does return manufacturing jobs to the US as the entire western world faces the same issues of deindustrialisation.
I'd personally like to thank trump for using his own country as the lab rat in this experiment.

The problem is when America is the lab rat, everyone suffers.
 
I suspect you are absolutely correct, but it will be interesting to see if these big companies 'blink first' or do indeed just pass on 100% of added costs to the consumer. Also, if long term it does return manufacturing jobs to the US as the entire western world faces the same issues of deindustrialisation.
I'd personally like to thank trump for using his own country as the lab rat in this experiment.
Once again, the result will very likely be that domestic competitors to importers raise prices too. “Big companies” have not ever, and will not ever, just blindly accept input price increases without trying to pass some of them through. For an all-domestic-sources peer (likely hard to find across a variety of goods), it’s free margin today or free market share tomorrow — and fewer competitors tomorrow means higher prices then assuming demand is static. Of course, probably demand won’t stay static — higher prices means a drop in unit demand, and hence economic contraction. Any price deflation will be due to this.
 
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Just had the misfortune to hear some crazy cow called Paula London screaming her submissive admiration for Trump and every squirt of swill to emerge from his orifices.
I don't think vacuous publicity hungry twats like this should be allowed on public service radio.
 
I can't believe that this is overshadowing the seismic news about Tunnock's teacakes no longer being banned by the RAF.
Tunnock’s teacakes are the confectionery of choice for the white working class.

Had a girlfriend from Uddingston, where they are made. She once went in the back of Mrs Tunnock’s Rolls Royce. Nothing sinister btw!
 
I suspect you are absolutely correct, but it will be interesting to see if these big companies 'blink first' or do indeed just pass on 100% of added costs to the consumer. Also, if long term it does return manufacturing jobs to the US as the entire western world faces the same issues of deindustrialisation.
I'd personally like to thank trump for using his own country as the lab rat in this experiment.
he hasn't restricted his experiment to his own country though has he
 
I suspect you are absolutely correct, but it will be interesting to see if these big companies 'blink first' or do indeed just pass on 100% of added costs to the consumer. Also, if long term it does return manufacturing jobs to the US as the entire western world faces the same issues of deindustrialisation.
I'd personally like to thank trump for using his own country as the lab rat in this experiment.


And the first to blink was the friend of Johnson and massive Tory Donor ....Lord Bamford of JCB Excavators ... who's now agreed to increase production in the States.

Just Tories being Tories.
 
Every other nation out there is putting tariffs on the US, meanwhile we're still begging for the same trade deal we asked for ten years ago. I know we have to be pragmatic but all this begging is futile. If Boris Johnson and his post-brexit pals couldn't get one, why would a Labour government?

You'd think the penny would've dropped years ago.
It may not be so bleak. Immediately after Brexit, the French were pissed off and angry with us and this led them to ‘punish’ us by being awkward about the terms of exit. They have cooled down now and realise that closer co-operation might be better. At the same time they can see this gov being more willing to accept our convergence with EU rules. So at the next round of talks, we may see more concessions from both sides. The new US policy on trade means we in Europe need to be united.
I realise this may not sway USA immediately but I’m sure Trump doesn’t want UK to move nearer the EU at this time. So he may soften.
Optimistic, I know, but possible.
 
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Rachel likes the long form story, and she likes to weave a tale, so if you want to skip the stock market opener, FFWD to 5:30…and be ASTOUNDED BY THE LUNACY that is driving the American (and global) economy off the cliff.

Pay particular attention to economic expert Ron Vara…



You can’t make it up because no-one would ever believe you!

$5TRILLION later, here we sit.
 
Watching Rubio nervously try to explain this away is hilarious but alarmingly worrying as you can see from his pale ashen faced demeanour he knows he is being forced to gaslight and it’s all lies.

What the fuck is wrong with these people?
 
As far as I can see, the megacorps will be able to weather the situation, enough range, enough brand loyalty and muscle to set things up. There will be a hit for a while, obviously.

It's the smaller companies who make things that are going to break. A long-standing boardgame company posted this on Thursday:

On April 5th, a 54% tariff goes into effect on a wide range of goods imported from China. For those of us who create boardgames, this is not just a policy change. It's a seismic shift.

At Steve Jackson Games, we are actively assessing what this means for our products, our pricing, and our future plans. We do know that we can't absorb this kind of cost increase without raising prices. We've done our best over the past few years to shield players and retailers from the full brunt of rising freight costs and other increases, but this new tax changes the equation entirely.

Here are the numbers: A product we might have manufactured in China for $3.00 last year could now cost $4.62 before we even ship it across the ocean. Add freight, warehousing, fulfillment, and distribution margins, and that once-$25 game quickly becomes a $40 product. That's not a luxury upcharge; it's survival math.

Some people ask, "Why not manufacture in the U.S.?" I wish we could. But the infrastructure to support full-scale boardgame production – specialty dice making, die-cutting, custom plastic and wood components – doesn't meaningfully exist here yet. I've gotten quotes. I've talked to factories. Even when the willingness is there, the equipment, labor, and timelines simply aren't.

We aren't the only company facing this challenge. The entire board game industry is having very difficult conversations right now. For some, this might mean simplifying products or delaying launches. For others, it might mean walking away from titles that are no longer economically viable. And, for what I fear will be too many, it means closing down entirely.

Tariffs, when part of a long-term strategy to bolster domestic manufacturing, can be an effective tool. But that only works when there's a plan to build up the industries needed to take over production. There is no national plan in place to support manufacturing for the types of products we make. This isn't about steel and semiconductors. This is about paper goods, chipboard, wood tokens, plastic trays, and color-matched ink. These new tariffs are imposing huge costs without providing alternatives, and it's going to cost American consumers more at every level of the supply chain.

We want to be transparent with our community. This is real: Prices are going up. We're still determining how much and where.

If you're frustrated, you're not alone. We are too. And if you want to help, write to your elected officials. Ask them how these new policies help American creators and small businesses. Because right now, it feels like they don't.

We'll keep making games. But we'll be honest when the road gets harder, because we know you care about where your games come from – and about the people who make them.

*
I would also think that there is a limited pool of resources that could replace overseas production. If that pool of resources is not enough to provide all the production, the megacorps will hoover it up first, and the smaller companies will go bust.
 
Nissan Motor is said to be considering shifting some domestic production of US-bound vehicles to the US, the Nikkei reported this morning.

The move would be trumpeted by Donald Trump as a win, as he has said he wants to reignite American industry with his tariffs.

It could happen as early as this summer.

The Japanese automaker is said to be planning to reduce production at its Fukuoka factory.

It would then shift some manufacturing of its Rogue SUV to the US to mitigate the impact of Trump's tariffs, the report said.
 
Rachel likes the long form story, and she likes to weave a tale, so if you want to skip the stock market opener, FFWD to 5:30…and be ASTOUNDED BY THE LUNACY that is driving the American (and global) economy off the cliff.

Pay particular attention to economic expert Ron Vara…



You can’t make it up because no-one would ever believe you!

$5TRILLION later, here we sit.


Um, gosh.
 

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