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Economists say J.D. Vance is wrong about benefits of tariffs outweighing negatives
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- Surveys have shown that the vast majority of economists believe tariffs’ negative impacts — which include higher costs for consumers — consistently outweigh the benefits. Academic and think tank studies bolster those views.
With former President Donald Trump proposing aggressive tariffs on foreign goods — including a 10% tariff on all nondomestic goods sold in the U.S. — his 2024 presidential running mate, Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, defended their benefits on NBC’s "Meet the Press."
"I think economists really disagree about the effects of tariffs," Vance told host Kristen Welker Aug. 25. He said some economists say tariffs raise costs for consumers. "But what other people say, and I think the record supports this other view, is that it causes this dynamic effect where more jobs come into the country. Anything that you lose on the tariff from the perspective of the consumer, you gain in higher wages, so you're ultimately much better off."
When contacted for comment, a Republican National Committee spokesperson cited a study by Coalition for a Prosperous America, a group of manufacturers and labor unions that generally supports higher tariffs. The study says a 10% tariff "would stimulate domestic production and raise economic growth to produce a 5.7% increase in real income for the average American household."
Most economists disagree with this idea. Our previous review of academic studies of real-world tariffs concluded that consumers ultimately shoulder most of the burden in higher prices for goods, and the burden outweighs tariffs’ economic benefits.
"In any profession that includes more than 20,000 members, there will be disagreement, and I’m sure Sen. Vance can recruit some adherents to his views," said Gary Burtless, an economist with the Brookings Institution, a think tank. But, Burtless said, "the great majority of economists favor freer trade policies," which means fewer tariffs.
The idea behind imposing tariffs is to make American companies more competitive with their foreign counterparts, by increasing prices on imported goods and therefore making domestic goods more attractive to consumers. As American companies prosper, the thinking goes, they can hire more workers and increase employees’ pay. Those workers, in turn, would have more money to spend, spreading those dollars around the economy more broadly.
Economists have told us, however, that real-world examples of tariffs working as intended are rare. Consumers in the tariff-levying country are on the losing end of the deals, by having to pay higher prices, they said.
When the tariff levied is small, an importer may choose to keep its prices stable rather than pass the tariff cost along to the consumer. But that is not a certainty.
"Tariffs artificially raise the cost of doing business, which depresses overall economic production in the form of lower gross domestic product, artificially higher prices, and fewer goods sold," Boise State University political scientist Ross Burkhart, who studies trade policy, told PolitiFact. "For the consumer, this means a reduction in purchasing power."
Tariffs also mean that producers pay more as prices rise for materials used to make products domestically.
"There are far more jobs in industries that use steel as an input than there are steelmaker jobs," Daniel Mitchell, an independent libertarian economist, told PolitiFact. And higher input costs are also likely to be passed on to consumers, economists said.
Meanwhile, U.S. producers can expect to face retaliatory tariffs, which can also raise prices for U.S. consumers. And a decline in international competition hurts consumers by enabling the remaining producers to raise prices.
There is also evidence that because lower-income Americans tend to spend a larger portion of their income on goods, they feel the pinch from tariffs more so than affluent Americans.
"Economists will disagree about the exact amount of harm this inflicts on consumers and the U.S. economy more generally," Burtless said. "But most of us probably agree there will be at least some reduction in our standard of living, at least eventually."
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Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the American Action Forum, a center-right group, called tariffs an "unambiguous negative for consumers," and said "there is vast empirical literature to buttress this conclusion."
Studies of past tariff impacts on consumers, jobs and wages include:
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The Tax Foundation, a center-right group, found in a 2024 study that tariffs on thousands of products — enacted under Trump and continued under President Joe Biden — reduced employment by 142,000 full-time equivalent jobs, while also shaving 0.2% off gross domestic product. (GDP is the market value of all the goods and services a country produces.)
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A 2024 paper published by researchers from Cornell, Yale, Duke and New York universities found that tariffs on imported solar panels were depressing employment and wages. Lifting the tariffs, the authors concluded, would have increased domestic employment and wages on net.
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A 2020 UCLA study calculated consumer losses of $51 billion from Trump tariffs through 2019, which was greater than gains to producers and the federal Treasury from tariff payments.
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A 2019 study for the National Bureau of Economic Research found that the costs of Trump’s tariff fell entirely on domestic consumers, with a $1.4 billion-per-month reduction in U.S. inflation-adjusted income by the end of 2018.
"Tariffs generally hurt consumers by raising prices and distorting the market," Tara Sinclair, a George Washington University economist said. "They may help specific areas and industries, and they may look like a small per-person cost, but they're generally very high cost on a per-job saved or created basis."
Sinclair and other economists acknowledged that tariffs can make sense in limited cases, such as for national security reasons. There’s also a case to be made for protecting domestic producers that face sudden overseas competition, said Dean Baker, co-founder of the liberal Center for Economic and Policy Research.
But even in those scenarios, it requires "carefully thinking through which sectors are being protected, rather than blanket protection," Baker said.
There is little disagreement on this question among credentialed economists, according to surveys.
In 1990, 2000, 2011 and 2021, researchers surveyed members of the American Economic Association, a professional group for economists, to gauge consensus among the group’s members on a range of economic propositions. One proposition asked whether "tariffs and import quotas usually reduce general economic welfare."
In each of the surveys spanning three decades, 94% to 95% of economists surveyed agreed that tariffs reduced general economic welfare.
Vance said, "Anything that you lose on the tariff from the perspective of the consumer, you gain in higher wages, so you're ultimately much better off."
The majority of economists believe the negative impacts from tariffs, including higher costs, consistently outweigh the benefits for consumers. Academic and think tank studies on tariffs’ effects bolster the economists’ views.
We rate the statement False.
Our Sources
J.D. Vance, interview on Meet the Press, Aug. 25, 2024
Coalition for a Prosperous America, "CPA Economic Model Shows 10% Universal Tariff Would Raise Incomes, Pay for Large Tax Cuts for Lower and Middle Class," July 24, 2024
Fox News, "Trump reveals why he wants a matching tax on trade," Aug. 18, 2023
Doris Geide-Stevenson and Alvaro La Parra Perez, "Consensus among economists 2020 – A sharpening of the picture," December 2021
Tax Foundation, "How the Section 232 Tariffs on Steel and Aluminum Harmed the Economy," Sept. 20, 2022
Tax Foundation, "Tariff Tracker: Tracking the Economic Impact of the Trump-Biden Tariffs," June 26, 2024
Bryan Bollinger, Todd Gerarden, Kenneth Gillingham, Drew Vollmer, and Daniel Yi Xu, "Strategic Avoidance and the Welfare Impacts of Solar Panel Tariffs," March 21, 2024
Peterson Institute for International Economics, "America’s payoff from engaging in world markets since 1950 was almost $2.6 trillion in 2022," December 2023
Pablo Fajgelbaum, Updates to Fajgelbaum et al. (2020) with 2019 tariff waves, January 21, 2020
Mary Amiti, Stephen J. Redding and David Weinstein, "The Impact of the 2018 Trade War on U.S. Prices and Welfare," March 2019
PolitiFact, "Who pays for US tariffs on Chinese goods? You do," May 14, 2019
PolitiFact, "Donald Trump's tariffs on China don't hurt Americans, top Trump adviser says. That's Pants on Fire," Aug. 20, 2019
Email interview with Barry Bosworth, senior fellow emeritus at the Brookings Institution, Aug. 27, 2024
Email interview with Gary Burtless, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, Aug. 27, 2024
Email interview with Ross Burkhart, Boise State University political scientist, Aug. 27, 2024
Email interview with Daniel Mitchell, libertarian economist, Aug. 27, 2024
Email interview with Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, Aug. 27, 2024
Email interview with Tara Sinclair, George Washington University economist, Aug. 27, 2024
Email interview with Douglas Holtz-Eakin, American Action Forum president, Aug. 27, 2024
Statement from the Trump campaign and the Republican National Committee, Aug. 27, 2024
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Economists say J.D. Vance is wrong about benefits of tariffs outweighing negatives
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