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Steven Klein's avatar

A recent NY Times Daily podcast captures well how destructive this tariff policy is. A small business owner from Minnesota described how the sudden tariffs of over 100% just months after she signed distribution deals with Walmart and Target. She can't afford to bring in the goods manufactured in China, so they are sitting in warehouses. She will run out of goods in the US in two months, after which she won't have any more income, and as a result she is in danger of losing her mortgaged home and all her other assets. Even if she wanted to on-shore the manufacturing, she doesn't have the capital to do so, and even if she did, it would take 6 months at least to get production going, meaning she would miss her contractual obligations.

She had originally calculated expenses based on 20-305 tariffs. Perhaps if the tariffs would be less excessive and introduced over a 6-12 month period, she could adjust, But their capricious nature is probably going to sink her, and countless other small business owners who can't secure exemptions the way Apple can.

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Alexandra Barcus's avatar

The specified tariffs on pharmaceuticals will have the practical effect of killing people. Even insurance companies will not pay much, and will deny the rest. If Medicaid, Medicare and the ACA are hit, people will be dying in the streets. There won’t be nursing home care for the indigent, and seniors among others will be unable to afford lifesaving medication. This is extremely serious.

Why not encourage manufacturing in areas where it might come back with grants rather than taking a punitive approach? And back off the absurd coal and auto worker jobs when the latter will be automated and the former is not workable?

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