US retailers are creating contingency plans to deal with the prospect of President-elect Donald Trump's proposed tariffs as he heads back to the White House.
Trump floated levies of 60 percent on imported goods from China and 20 percent on all imported goods into the United States while he was a presidential candidate. He may also enact a 100 percent tariff on nations that don't use the US dollar and slap high tariffs on cars built in Mexico.
"Tariffs are the greatest thing ever invented," Trump said in September in Flint, Michigan.
Tariffs, which work as a sales tax on products produced outside of the boundaries of the countries that import those goods, could impact most US industries, observers say.
Under Trump's plan, US citizens could lose between $46 billion and $78 billion in spending power per year on products like clothing, toys, furniture, appliances and travel goods, the National Retail Federation said. A $50 pair of sneakers could cost $59 to $64 under the levy.
Trump has said China will pay for the tariffs, not US businesses or consumers. But companies that face the duties are busy deciding whether they will have to source products from outside of China or raise their prices. One company says it will do the latter.
"If we get tariffs, we will pass those tariff costs back to the consumer," Philip Daniele, CEO of AutoZone, an auto parts chain, said on a September earnings call.
"We'll generally raise prices ahead of we know what the tariffs will be; we generally raise prices ahead of that," Daniele said.
Tiffany Smith, vice-president of global trade policy for the National Foreign Trade Council in Washington, DC, told China Daily: "New and expanded tariffs will harm working families."
The new duties also could mean "a household with median income is projected to pay $1,700 more each year in import taxes", Mary Lovely, professor emeritus of economics at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs of Syracuse University and a senior fellow of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told China Daily.
Trump said his policy will move manufacturing back to the US, creating more jobs, but not all companies say they can afford US facilities.
It is "unlikely that we're moving a lot back to the US because it's just not cost-effective to do", Donald Allan Jr, president and CEO of Stanley Black & Decker, said on a recent earnings call.
In the spring, the toolmaker, with revenue of $16 billion, forged a plan to deal with any levy, admitting that any "price increases associated with tariffs (would be) put into the market".
Zichun Huang, a China economist at Capital Economics, a business research group, wrote in a recent note: "Trump's return could create a short-term boost to Chinese exports as US importers increase their purchases to get ahead of the tariffs."
China-based e-commerce companies and others accounted for 20 percent of net new warehouse leasing across the US in 2024, according to Prologis, the world's largest industrial real estate operator.
In Trump's first term in office, he imposed tariffs on more than $300 billion of Chinese-made goods, and the US was hit with retaliatory tariffs.
President Joe Biden maintained those original tariffs and increased levies on $18 billion of Chinese imports in September.
Inflationary pressure
Steve Lamar, CEO of the American Apparel & Footwear Association, said in a statement: "Tariff policy under the new administration will indeed be a challenge and will trigger new inflationary cycles if campaign proposals are fully enacted, making it more expensive for Americans to get dressed every day."
Trump's advisers recently met with Republican Jason Smith, chair of the US House Ways and Means Committee, to discuss how a tax package could be partially paid for by tariffs, according to Politico.
In the early days of the US, tariffs were widely used to raise revenue for the government. However, since the 1950s, tariffs have accounted for 2 percent of total federal revenue, according to the Congressional Revenue Service.
"As trade barriers, (tariffs) can also cause domestic industries to become less competitive and lead other countries to retaliate," Thomas Fullerton, a US economist and economics professor at the University of Texas at El Paso, told China Daily. "When that happened during the 1930s, it caused the Great Depression to deepen and become more protracted."
As tariffs remain an issue among businesses, Trump on Saturday selected Chris Wright, the CEO of an oilfield services company, as his pick for the next secretary of the Energy Department.
Wright is the CEO of Liberty Energy, a Denver-based company that provides hydraulic fracturing services to the oil and gas industry.
On Friday, Trump named Karoline Leavitt, his campaign press secretary, to serve as his White House press secretary.
Leavitt, 27, currently a spokesperson for Trump's transition, would be the youngest White House press secretary in history. Previously that distinction went to Ronald Ziegler, who was 29 when he took the position in 1969 in Richard Nixon's administration.
Reporter: Belinda Robinson
Agencies and Xinhua contributed to this story.