Trump tariffs rattle small business owners already dealing with tight
margins
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[February 12, 2025] By
MAE ANDERSON
NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump's continued roll out of a wide
array of tariffs is rattling small business owners already dealing with
tight profit margins.
Trump on Monday announced a 25% tariff on steel and aluminum and
promised more import duties to come. Last week, the administration
imposed a ,10% tariff on Chinese goods coming into the U.S.
Sandra Payne, owner of Denver Concrete Vibrator, imports steel and other
raw materials for her business. Her company makes tools to settle
concrete and other industrial tools. Most of the steel the company uses
comes from China, and she gets material from Canada and Mexico, too.
“Small businesses run on very small margins. And so a 25% increase in
any product is going to hurt," she said. “And we can’t just raise our
prices every time the cost goes up to us. So we are losing a lot of
money.”
In addition to the steel and China tariffs, other tariffs on Mexican and
Canadian goods have been temporarily put on hol d, but they could be
implemented later. So, small business owners still need a strategy for
mitigating the costs of the tariffs if they go into effect.
Across the border, Julie Bednarski-Malik runs a snack company, Healthy
Crunch, based in Mississauga, Ontario. She sells her products in both
Canadian and U.S. retail stores, and said she might have to raise prices
depending on how the tariffs unfold. But she’s still in wait-and-see
mode as tariffs loom.
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In this May 9, 2019, file photo, steel rods produced at the Gerdau
Ameristeel mill in St. Paul, Minn., await shipment. (AP Photo/Jim
Mone, File)
 “I know that this is going to come
into effect, but we’re still unclear exactly the timing and the
percentage and what sort of commodities are going to be impacted,”
she said. “We hope that, you know, the U.S. and Canada could work
together to find some sort of resolution because we are such close
allies and trading partners.”
Bar Zakheim, owns Better Place Design & Build, a contracting
business in San Diego that specializes in building accessible
dwelling units, or ADUs. He said he is especially worried about
lumber.
“This stuff has already been getting more expensive over the past
few years due to supply chain shocks and wildfires, and a huge
proportion of our lumber comes from Canada,” he said. “These tariffs
are going to make everything we do considerably more expensive, at a
time when the high-priced housing market and high interest rates are
already cutting into our bottom line.”
Payne, of Denver Concrete Vibrator, added that the tariffs will
likely have a domino effect.
”I sell to other businesses, I don’t sell to the end user. So
everything that happens to me is going to happen all the way down
the line. It’s going to impact everyone down the line."
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