bobcat
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern Calif
Do they work, and who ends up paying them?
If the president imposes a 20% tariff on something coming from China, several things can happen.
So, how does a tariff work.
When the goods arrive at the dock in America, the retailer that ordered them pays for the extra cost. Then they have three choices. They could just absorb the extra cost, which reduces their profit significantly, or they could pass half of the cost on to the consumer, or pass all the cost on to their customers.
The president can then present to the public the impressive figure of, (Let's say 38 billion dollars) of extra revenue collected by the tariff, all the while, the American public are likely the ones who paid it. The reason could be used, that with the now higher price of goods coming from China, that it will turn people toward buying the more expensive American goods instead of from China.
Next, the tariff imposed will likely provoke the other country to impose a tariff on goods we ship to them, which means their consumers will likely pay it, or they may seek those goods from a different country.
It's complicated, but in the end, who is giving this extra money to the government, and who does it benefit or hurt in the end.
If the president imposes a 20% tariff on something coming from China, several things can happen.
So, how does a tariff work.
When the goods arrive at the dock in America, the retailer that ordered them pays for the extra cost. Then they have three choices. They could just absorb the extra cost, which reduces their profit significantly, or they could pass half of the cost on to the consumer, or pass all the cost on to their customers.
The president can then present to the public the impressive figure of, (Let's say 38 billion dollars) of extra revenue collected by the tariff, all the while, the American public are likely the ones who paid it. The reason could be used, that with the now higher price of goods coming from China, that it will turn people toward buying the more expensive American goods instead of from China.
Next, the tariff imposed will likely provoke the other country to impose a tariff on goods we ship to them, which means their consumers will likely pay it, or they may seek those goods from a different country.
It's complicated, but in the end, who is giving this extra money to the government, and who does it benefit or hurt in the end.