Skip to content
The Chicago Today
Quantum Aerospace
  • Home
  • Current News
  • Explore & Enjoy
  • Sports
  • Sound & Screen
  • Sip & Savor
  • Style & Innovation
  • Editors Take
Trending
October 3, 2025Taylor Swift Shatters Records with ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ Release: Album Breaks Spotify Pre-Save Milestone Amidst Major Music Day October 3, 2025Music’s Biggest Day: Taylor Swift, Victoria Justice, Luke Combs, and More Unleash Major New Releases on October 3, 2025 October 3, 2025Englewood Murder-Suicide: Chicago Police Investigate Double Fatal Shooting, Latest CHICAGO NEWS Tops Headlines October 3, 2025Tensions Spike at Broadview ICE Facility: Barricades, Detentions Mark Escalation of Immigration Enforcement Protests October 3, 2025Trump Administration Halts $2.1 Billion in Chicago Transit Funding Amidst Government Shutdown Over Contracting Concerns October 3, 2025Trending Sports News: Chicago Cubs Clinch NLDS Berth Against Brewers in First Postseason Series Win Since 2017 October 3, 2025Chicago Cubs Secure First Postseason Series Win Since 2017, Advance to NLDS Against Manager Craig Counsell’s Former Team, the Milwaukee Brewers October 3, 2025Chicago’s Lincoln Park Wine Fest Returns for Ninth Year: Explore Global Flavors and Enjoy a Fall Weekend October 3, 2025Ninth Annual Lincoln Park Wine Fest Returns to Chicago October 3-5: Explore Global Wines and Enjoy Local Flavors October 3, 2025India Demands Pakistan Accountability Amid PoK Crackdown; SIT Probes Karur Stampede; Activist Wangchuk’s Detention Challenged in Supreme Court
The Chicago Today
The Chicago Today
  • Home
  • Current News
  • Explore & Enjoy
  • Sports
  • Sound & Screen
  • Sip & Savor
  • Style & Innovation
  • Editors Take
  • Blog
  • Forums
  • Shop
  • Contact
The Chicago Today
  Editors Take  Elizabeth Shackelford: President Donald Trump’s tariffs will cost us
Editors Take

Elizabeth Shackelford: President Donald Trump’s tariffs will cost us

Sierra EllisSierra Ellis—April 4, 20250
FacebookX TwitterPinterestLinkedInTumblrRedditVKWhatsAppEmail

As President Donald Trump laid out his case for sweeping new tariffs, it sounded reasonable. He was only imposing on other countries the burden they impose on us. Those tariffs, he said, would boost our national revenue and decrease our deficit. He recalled a wealthy America 150 years ago funded entirely by tariffs instead of a pesky income tax, and he longed to make the rest of the world fund our national budget again.

Trump bemoaned how the United States subsidized other countries to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars because we buy more goods from them than they do from us. The tariffs, he said, would drive manufacturing and production back home and increase the goods we sell around the world. 

These tariffs include a minimum 10% on all imported goods, and what he called “reciprocal” tariffs on dozens of other U.S. trade partners, including an additional 34% tariff on goods from China, 32% on Taiwan and 24% on Japan.

The problem with the case he presented is that none of it is true. His “reciprocal” tariff numbers don’t match other countries’ tariffs but are derived instead from each country’s trade surplus with us. Trump’s “reciprocal” tariff against the European Union is 20%, for example, although the average EU tariff on U.S. goods is less than 3%. That won’t stop our trade partners from making these exorbitant numbers real, however, when many inevitably respond with matching tariff hikes in return. 

Trump’s claim that these trade surpluses are subsidies is also baseless. Every dollar spent in those markets is a choice we make and benefit from, and we are still the world’s wealthiest economy, even if that is not driven by material exports.   

Trump’s tariff income will not make us wealthier either because those tariffs are a tax on us. The costs aren’t absorbed by foreign countries or manufacturers that give up their profit margin. They will be paid by U.S. businesses and consumers instead. 

More stories
Elizabeth Shackelford President Donald Trump’s tariffs will cost us

Elizabeth Shackelford: President Donald Trump’s tariffs will cost us

April 4, 2025

Editorial: Trump’s foolish tariffs take the US economy back centuries

Trump claims the tradeoff will be in long-term benefits as the tariffs encourage companies to bring manufacturing and production back to America. But even if so, that shift will take years and, given our relative labor costs, much of what we produce will still likely cost more than the alternatives, so Americans can’t expect prices to decline then either. 

We live in a world today very unlike that of the 19th century America that Trump glorifies. In our globalized world, even American-made goods are composed of component parts from dozens of countries. Farmers across the Midwest who rely heavily on inputs, such as potash and other fertilizers from Mexico and Canada, will see production costs increase, while export markets dry up due to retaliatory tariffs on our goods. Our access to off-season fruits and vegetables depends on international trade. So does our access to less expensive clothing and electronics. Some commodities will become scarce because it isn’t commercially viable to either build or grow them at home or to bring them in. 

You can certainly begrudge trade agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement that gutted American manufacturing by giving U.S. businesses and consumers easy access to lower prices and labor. Or unfair trade practices such as China’s currency manipulation that has long helped China secure trade surpluses around the world. Or lower regulatory standards elsewhere that make it cheaper to produce these goods. 

But Trump does Americans a disservice by pretending this can all be undone overnight, or that the American people even want that. The predictable result of Trump’s tariffs will be higher costs for American businesses and consumers, fewer export markets, a global economic slowdown and a disadvantaged place in the global economy. Is it worth that for a more self-sufficient, but poorer, America?

We can’t expect other countries to make up the difference either, as we take an adversarial posture toward our integrated global economy. Instead of looking to appease Trump’s demands, they’re now looking to replace us. Canada has tired of trying to negotiate and is settling instead into boycotts and “Buy Canada” campaigns. The European Union has vowed to retaliate. Our close allies South Korea and Japan joined China, our greatest adversary, in their first economic dialogue in five years, as they all look to strengthen their resilience against Trump’s pressure campaign. China and Brazil, South America’s biggest economy, already struck a deal to trade in their own currencies instead of the U.S. dollar. These tariffs will inevitably drive other countries to consider the same. If we are not dependable trading partners, our partners will stop depending on us, which will cost us too.  

As our businesses and consumers suffer the consequences, the global economy’s role in our prosperity will become impossible to ignore. But it may be too late to roll this back by the time we all realize it. 

Elizabeth Shackelford is senior policy director at Dartmouth College’s Dickey Center for International Understanding and a foreign affairs columnist for the Chicago Tribune. She was previously a U.S. diplomat and is the author of “The Dissent Channel: American Diplomacy in a Dishonest Age.” 

Submit a letter, of no more than 400 words, to the editor here or email letters@chicagotribune.com.

Originally Published: April 3, 2025 at 10:01 AM CDT

economytariffs
FacebookX TwitterPinterestLinkedInTumblrRedditVKWhatsAppEmail

Sierra Ellis

Chicago’s Top Culinary Contenders: Meet the 5 James Beard Nominees
Cedar Lake Local Claims Top Honors in World Rib Championship
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Editors Take

Chicago Unveils Massive Quantum Campus at Historic South Works Site, Poised to Lead Tech Innovation

October 1, 20250
Editors Take

Chicago Shoppers Reap Unexpected $40 Million Windfall as Grocery Tax Deadline is Missed

October 1, 20250
Editors Take

Editorial Analysis: Chicago Fire’s Privately Funded Stadium Offers a Blueprint for Urban Development

September 28, 20250
Load more
Read also
Sound & Screen

Taylor Swift Shatters Records with ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ Release: Album Breaks Spotify Pre-Save Milestone Amidst Major Music Day

October 3, 20250
Sound & Screen

Music’s Biggest Day: Taylor Swift, Victoria Justice, Luke Combs, and More Unleash Major New Releases on October 3, 2025

October 3, 20250
Headlines

Englewood Murder-Suicide: Chicago Police Investigate Double Fatal Shooting, Latest CHICAGO NEWS Tops Headlines

October 3, 20250
Featured

Tensions Spike at Broadview ICE Facility: Barricades, Detentions Mark Escalation of Immigration Enforcement Protests

October 3, 20250
Featured

Trump Administration Halts $2.1 Billion in Chicago Transit Funding Amidst Government Shutdown Over Contracting Concerns

October 3, 20250
Sports

Trending Sports News: Chicago Cubs Clinch NLDS Berth Against Brewers in First Postseason Series Win Since 2017

October 3, 20250
Load more
Moseley koch 1x1 square wordpress copy 50 opacity gen fill willamette weekly copy
Recent Posts
  • Taylor Swift Shatters Records with ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ Release: Album Breaks Spotify Pre-Save Milestone Amidst Major Music Day October 3, 2025
  • Music’s Biggest Day: Taylor Swift, Victoria Justice, Luke Combs, and More Unleash Major New Releases on October 3, 2025 October 3, 2025
  • Englewood Murder-Suicide: Chicago Police Investigate Double Fatal Shooting, Latest CHICAGO NEWS Tops Headlines October 3, 2025
  • Tensions Spike at Broadview ICE Facility: Barricades, Detentions Mark Escalation of Immigration Enforcement Protests October 3, 2025
  • Trump Administration Halts $2.1 Billion in Chicago Transit Funding Amidst Government Shutdown Over Contracting Concerns October 3, 2025

    # TRENDING

    chicagoaiFashionStreamingreviewfundinginnovationfestivalmusicnetflixnascarculinarylineuphulushootingtradedininglegislationcubstragedy
    © 2024 All Rights Reserved by Chicago Today
    • Contact
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    The Chicago Today
    Manage Consent
    To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
    Functional Always active
    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
    Preferences
    The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
    Statistics
    The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
    Marketing
    The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
    Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
    View preferences
    {title} {title} {title}