Alfredo Carrillo Obregon’s and Scott Lincicome’s letter in today’s Wall Street Journal is superb:
Paul Rahe’s justifications for tariffs fail under scrutiny (“There’s a Case for Tariffs,” op-ed, April 16).
Mr. Rahe assumes tariffs boost resiliency, but recent history shows the opposite. National security might justify narrow trade restrictions, but tariffs have not insulated Americans from economic disruptions and have frequently made things worse. The baby-formula crisis of 2022 and automakers’ recent struggles to obtain aluminum, each triggered by the sudden closure of a tariff-protected U.S. factory, show that localized supply chains are vulnerable to local shocks—and tariffs block alternatives. Research from the pandemic finds that globalized supply chains performed better and adjusted faster than nationalized ones.
Mr. Rahe also errs on tariffs’ ability to promote manufacturing. Decades of protection failed to create thriving U.S. steel, shipbuilding, textile and footwear industries. More recent duties on solar panels did the same. With around half of imports being manufacturing inputs, tariffs raise American producers’ costs and undermine competitiveness. Combined with uncertainty surrounding executive branch tariffs, this explains why surveys consistently reveal manufacturers opposed to new protectionism.
Mr. Rahe is correct about the intrusiveness of income taxes, but tariffs can’t replace them because import volumes are far too small. Their invisibility, meanwhile, isn’t the benefit Mr. Rahe thinks. Since the 19th century, tariffs have been a breeding ground for rent-seeking and corruption and have persisted after decades of failure, precisely because their costs are hidden and diffuse. Transparency is a hallmark of good tax policy; opacity is its enemy.
Also from Alfredo Carrillo Obregon – here writing at National Review – is this accurate assessment of Trump’s tariffs punitive taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports. Three slices:
Even before the Court scrapped the Trump administration’s reciprocal tariffs, however, these duties were riddled with tariff-rate reductions and exemptions. First, the president paused the implementation of the tariffs for 90 days following a stock market plunge in reaction to his liberation day announcement, and he invited countries to negotiate lower rates during that time. Several U.S. trading partners (including the European Union, Japan, and South Korea) proceeded to negotiate agreements (or frameworks for agreements) with the administration, locking in lower reciprocal tariff rates in exchange for trade concessions and investment pledges. Then the president issued many rounds of exemptions from the reciprocal tariffs, most notably for semiconductors and certain electronics, including smartphones and computers, products from countries that negotiated agreements or framework agreements, and agricultural products.
As a result, the applied U.S. tariff rate fell from 21.5 percent, at its highest point in 2025, to 13.6 percent before the Supreme Court ruling. Most notably, only 42 percent of U.S. imports (based on 2024 import levels) were subject to IEEPA tariffs by the end of 2025. While these numbers help explain why the tariffs were not as harmful as many experts feared in April 2025, they also demonstrate that the president’s policies, from the outset, were hampered by economic realities and influenced by political considerations.
…..
The emerging economic literature on the tariffs imposed in 2025 broadly finds that Americans paid for most of the tariffs’ higher costs. Studies published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Goldman Sachs, and the Brookings Institution, among others, find that, in the aggregate, Americans bore 77 to 96 percent of the 2025 tariffs’ higher costs, with American companies paying for most of this tariff pass-through. At the same time, a Harvard Business School survey of products sold at large U.S. retailers found that tariffs led to higher retail prices of both imported and domestic goods in the same product categories. Not only did U.S. consumers pay for about 43 percent of the tariff-induced increase in the cost of imported goods, but import-competing U.S. producers also marked up their prices.
The administration and proponents of protectionism often point out that tariffs did not lead to an inflationary spiral. A low bar, to be sure, yet many economists doubted this could happen from the outset. Even many economists opposed to the tariffs doubted such a spiral, in part because imports of goods accounted for only 11 percent of U.S. GDP in 2024.
These economic analyses consider tariffs’ visible costs — that is, their effects on prices — yet tariffs also impose invisible costs on Americans that, while harder to quantify, compound their economic damage. One of these unseen costs is the uncertainty surrounding U.S. tariff policy. The U.S. tariff code underwent 50 changes in 2025, most of them related to tariffs imposed and modified by the executive branch. That is double the average number of tariff changes in the preceding five years. It is no surprise, then, that researchers have quantified that uncertainty surrounding U.S. trade policy reached its highest point on record in April 2025. For businesses with global networks of suppliers that took years to build, this uncertainty is crippling.
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Most notably, a tariff-induced “manufacturing renaissance” has not materialized. While industrial capacity indeed increased in 2025, this is only a continuation of a trend that started in early 2022. Real manufacturing output is unchanged from 2022. Real manufacturing value-added (i.e., output minus costs of intermediate inputs) appears to be on track for a historic high, yet this record has been broken nearly every year since the Great Recession in 2009. Meanwhile, inflation-adjusted spending on manufacturing facilities precipitously declined throughout 2025. The post-2022 decline in manufacturing capacity utilization continued, and the economy added no manufacturing jobs in 2025.
While the U.S. manufacturing sector, as a result of many factors, has gone through fits and starts since 2022, the recent tariffs clearly have not reversed the sector’s fortunes. On the contrary, they probably worsened them. Industry surveys during 2025 indicated that higher, tariff-induced prices and tariff uncertainty depressed activity and growth for firms throughout most of the sector. Re-shoring, though appealing as political rhetoric, is not a viable business strategy for many of these businesses.
Richard Menger makes clear that, like international-trade protectionism, domestic protectionism – specifically here, certificate-of-need (“CON”) legislation – also reduces competition, restricts output, raises prices, and lowers quality.
My former Mercatus Center colleague Adam Thierer tweets: (HT Scott Lincicome)
What have information and communications technology companies done for us lately?
Well, here’s one of the most underappreciated things. It remains remarkable just how fast information technology platforms and application providers responded to the COVID shutdowns with rapid-fire deployment of new services that helped many sectors and workers muddle through using new work from home (WFH) technologies.
This innovation and workplace revolution continues marching forward according to this new study, which reveals: “The share of patent applications that advances technologies in support of WFH rose by about two thirds within three years after the pandemic struck and remains about 50% above pre-pandemic levels five years later. [. . . ] It is driven overwhelmingly by US corporations rather than foreign assignees or universities. In short, we find evidence that a sudden, lasting rise in WFH redirected innovation to technologies that support it.”
This has opened the door to more remote work / flexible work arrangements for a huge number of people, including me. 🙏
“Trump Proved to be Unimaginably Bad for the Free Market Cause: A Conversation with Veronique de Rugy.”
The Editorial Board of the Washington Post warns against the childish belief that government should supply health-care free of direct charges to users of health care. A slice:
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York) visited a park with a podcaster recently to seek policy advice from elementary school students. Surprise: The children agreed with AOC – and brought the same level of sophistication to political and economic questions that Americans have come to expect from the four-term congresswoman.
One child suggested that the United States should have free health care. But why talk to children, who should never be used as political props, when there is plenty of empirical data about health policy around the world?
Putting the government in charge of giving out “free” health care inevitably leads people to look elsewhere.
Consider Britain and its National Health Service, which for decades has been the beau ideal for American progressives
Despite the government funding and running a universal health care system, private hospital admissions in the United Kingdom reached their highest level ever in 2024, according to fresh data from the Private Healthcare Information Network.
The number of people opting to buy private health insurance rose to 6.5 million in 2024, the highest number in a quarter-century, according to the Association of British Insurers.
GMU Econ alum Caleb Petitt looks at the nations in Adam Smith’s Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations.