Small business owners brace for Trump's proposed tariffs
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[December 04, 2024] By
MAE ANDERSON
Small businesses are bracing for stiff tariffs that President-elect
Donald Trump has proposed as one of his first actions when he takes
office.
Trump has proposed importers pay a 25% tax on all products entering the
country from Canada and Mexico, and an additional 10% tariff on goods
from China, as one of his first executive orders. He previously floated
a tariff of up to 20% on everything else the United States imports.
This means small businesses may end up paying more for goods and
services. Small business owners say they're waiting to see what final
form the tariffs take, but are bracing for higher costs that they may in
turn need to pass on to consumers.
Laurel Orley, cofounder and CEO of Nashville-based sprouted nut snack
company Daily Crunch, said at first she didn't think the tariffs would
affect her business, because she doesn't import very much. But she
realized the tariffs will have a ripple effect. For example, she had
planned on sourcing bags from China to save 5 cents a bag. But with the
tariffs, she might need to scuttle that plan.
“That was one of our big initiatives for 2025, moving all our bags to
China for 15 cents a bag,” she said. “And now I don’t know if we can
save any money on the bags when the tariffs go into effect.”
Warehouse prices are going up because of the expected tariffs, too,
Orley said. Her warehouse provider said demand has been increasing since
the tariffs were announced.
“As many other companies are buying bulk inventory overseas to get ahead
of tariffs, warehouse availability is becoming limited, which will
increase costs for everyone,” she said.
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Workers sort avocados at a packing plant in Uruapan, Mexico
Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2024. (AP Photo/Armando Solis)
So, Orley is trying to lock in her
warehouse contract for 2025 and find a third-party logistics
provider for the year, “to get ahead of what’s to come and
pre-planning as much as we can,” she said.
Across the border in Canada, Julie Bednarski-Malik runs another
snack company, Healthy Crunch, based in Mississauga, Ontario, that
specializes in foods that are free of the top 11 major food
allergens like peanut, tree nut and dairy as well as low in sugar.
She sells her products in both Canadian and U.S. retail stores, and
said tariffs will affect consumers on both sides.
“If you have a severe anaphylactic reaction to some type of dairy or
soy and you can’t find a product in the U.S. because we’re the only
ones that make it, it’s going to be a lot more expensive for U.S.
consumers," Bednarski-Malik said. ”So I think these tariffs are
really not only going to be penalizing, you know, other countries
such as Canada, but also U.S. consumers."
She's holding off on making any major changes in her business until
the tariffs are finalized, but expects to see higher prices.
“Ultimately, the consumer is going to have to pay at the end of the
day because our margins are so tight beginning with our food prices,
(which) have been increasing dramatically over the last few years,”
she said. “So there’s not much margin left to keep the same price
and maintain that price while incurring a 25% extra tariff on our
product.”
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