Tariffs Shock Economy and Markets

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The markets are in the middle of a historic decline. Not so much in the magnitude—while we are approaching a bear market, these happen fairly regularly—but in the speed of the drop. We have rarely, if ever, seen this kind of a sudden decline, especially from close to record levels. People are nervous, of course, and understandably so. But that makes it even more important to take a step back and understand how we got here because that will inform where we are going.

The short answer for the decline is tariffs. The White House has unilaterally imposed tariffs on essentially the entire rest of the world, raising overall trade barriers to levels we haven't seen since the 1930s. Other countries, notably China, have imposed tariffs in response, leading to fears of a wider trade war. Again, this is something we have not seen since the 1930s.

This all leaves us with two questions. First, why are tariffs so bad? And second, what will they mean going forward?

What’s the Damage?

For the first question, tariffs are economically damaging because they are a tax on trade. Companies that import items and are subject to the tariff will see their costs rise. They then have to choose whether to eat those costs—reducing their profits—or pass them along by raising prices. Either way, the result is bad for the economy and the market, as either profits go down or inflation goes up.

Tariffs can also disrupt supply chains. Companies that have been, for example, assembling and selling imported parts may not have the liquidity to absorb the higher costs. Again, reduced capacity can result in lower availability or higher inflation. So, for the economy and the financial markets, tariffs are a significant negative shock. While there may be offsetting benefits in the longer term, the short-term effects are playing out right now.

In some respects, we have seen this movie before. The best recent example of this type of economic shock—although from a very different cause—was the pandemic. There, too, we saw availability go down and costs go up. We saw inflation and disruption of the economy. And, of course, we saw a similar drawdown in markets. That kind of exogenous shock is what we are seeing here and now as well, and it’s what markets are reacting to.

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