Trump's erratic trade policies are baffling businesses, threatening
investment and economic growth
[March 07, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN, ANNE D'INNOCENZIO and MAE ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (AP) — Marc Rosenberg, founder and CEO of The Edge Desk in
Deerfield, Illinois is getting ready to introduce a fancy ergonomic
chair designed to reduce customers’ back pain and boost their
productivity. He figures the most expensive one will sell for more than
$1,000. But he can’t settle on a price, and he is reluctantly reducing
the shipment he’s bringing to the United States from China.
There’s a reason for his caution: President Donald Trump’s
ever-changing, on-again, off-again tariff war with America’s three
biggest trading partners – Mexico, Canada and China.
The latest reversal came Thursday. Two days after imposing 25% taxes —
tariffs — on all imports from Canada and Mexico and threatening to
detonate more than $1.3 billion in annual U.S. trade in North America,
Trump announced that he was suspending many of the levies on Mexico and
some of them on Canada for a month. This was an expansion of his
Wednesday announcement when he exempted auto imports from both countries
for 30 days, and it also comes after a previous monthlong tariff
reprieve for Canada and Mexico right before they were to take effect
Feb. 4.
“Trump is jerking around the entire continent of North America right
now, it’s stupid and it has to stop," Democratic Rep. Don Beyer of
Virginia said. "Today there are businesses that don’t even know if the
goods they trade in are subject to Trump’s tariffs. Everything Trump
does on trade seems designed to maximize chaos and uncertainty.
Rosenberg and his ergonomic furniture, meanwhile, are contending with a
20% tariff on imports from China – which Trump on Tuesday raised from
10% -- but he’s not sure where the tariff will actually land.

“The misdirection is making it very tough to plan for the year,’’ he
said.
Tariffs cause economic pain in part because they’re a tax paid by
importers that often gets passed along to consumers, adding to
inflationary pressure. They also draw retaliation from trading partners,
which can hurt all economies involved.
But import taxes can cause economic damage in another way: by
complicating the decisions businesses have to make, including which
suppliers to use, where to locate factories, what prices to charge. And
that uncertainty can cause them to delay or cancel investments that help
drive economic growth.
“It creates an enormous amount of uncertainty for multinational
companies that sell products worldwide, that import from the rest of the
world, that run these complex supply chains through multiple countries,”
said Eswar Prasad, an economist at Cornell University. “The uncertainty
is going to be very unsettling for businesses and ... it will hurt
business investment.''
During Trump’s first-term trade battles, U.S. business investment
weakened late in 2019, convincing the Federal Reserve to cut its
benchmark interest rate three times in second half of the year to
provide some offsetting economic stimulus.
Trump 2.0 is even more unnerving to business. The first Trump
administration imposed tariffs on specific targets — steel and aluminum
and most goods from China — after lengthy investigations.
This time, Trump has invoked his power to declare a national emergency —
ostensibly over the flow of illegal drugs and immigrants across U.S.
borders — to impose tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China with the stroke
of a pen. And he’s expanded his targets. Next month, for example, he
intends to impose “reciprocal tariffs’’ on countries that charge higher
import taxes than America does.
“Just the threat of those tariff increases and potential retaliations
are putting a brake on — on investment, on consumption decisions, on
employment, hiring, all the rest of it,’’ European Central Bank chief
Christine Lagarde said after the ECB cut interest rates Thursday to
support Europe’s struggling economy.
His tariffs on Canada and Mexico effectively blow up a 2020 North
American trade deal he negotiated himself five years ago. “Past trade
agreements simply don’t mean much if the president can unilaterally
violate them and impose tariffs with no checks at all,” said Douglas
Irwin, an economist at Dartmouth College.

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Workers sort avocados at a packing plant in Uruapan, Mexico, Nov.
27, 2024. (AP Photo/Armando Solis, File)
 Adding to the uncertainty: It’s
unclear what Trump is trying to achieve by plastering tariffs on
American trading partners. Sometimes he cites border security.
Sometimes he emphasizes the revenue that tariffs can generate for
the Treasury — money that can help finance his proposed tax cuts.
Sometimes he points to America’s big trade deficits with most other
countries.
Since the goals are cloudy, it’s hard to see what it will take to
make Trump’s tariffs go away.
Not only that, but he’s imposed the tariffs erratically, creating
even more confusion. For instance, his administration had to reverse
itself last month after ending a customs loophole – the “de minimis”
exemption -- allowing duty-free entry into the United States of
packages from China and Hong Kong worth less than $800. Turned out,
the U.S. postal service needed more time to figure out how to
collect the duties.
Businesses are baffled. “I’ve talked to multiple companies that are
saying, ‘We’re not moving forward with any investment. We need this
to be settled,’” said trade lawyer Gregory Husisian at the law firm
Foley & Lardner. At least in Trump’s first term “they knew what the
ground rules were. Now they don’t know if we’re playing Monopoly or
tic-tac-toe.’’
Respondents to the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing
survey, out Monday, voiced complaints about the tariff uncertainty.
“There is no clear direction from the administration on how they
will be implemented, so it’s harder to project how they will affect
business,” a transportation equipment company said. A chemicals firm
griped: “The tariff environment regarding products from Mexico and
Canada has created uncertainty and volatility among our customers.’’
“Right now, the tariffs are putting everybody off balance because of
their unpredictability and uncertainty,” said John Gulliver,
president of the New England-Canada Business Council.
Taylor Samuels, the owner of Las Almas Rotas, a bar and restaurant
in Dallas, depends on Mexico for much of the alcohol he offers.
The uncertainty surrounding the tariffs, including the potential
impact on the price of raw materials like steel and lumber, are
forcing him to review his plans to build a new restaurant.
“That construction budget is now under review and may likely be
delayed ... as I recalculate costs that have already been budgeted,”
he said.
Similarly, Sandya Dandamudi of GI Stone, a stone supplier in
Chicago, said builders are having to rethink their plans.

“Developers of commercial projects like high-rises and hotels budget
two years in advance, so they don’t account for new tariffs,” she
said. “Those budgets will be blown.’’
Dandamudi said that companies will either succeed in passing the
tariffs along to their customers or they will be forced to cancel
projects.
“The tariffs will be devastating for small businesses like ours,”
she said. “Going forward, we won’t be able to sign any new contracts
unless clients address the tariffs.”
Holly Seidewand, owner of First Fill Spirits, a shop in Saratoga
Springs, New York, that sells Canadian whisky and other specialty
spirits, said her plans for the future have been put on hold due to
the tariffs. Her original plan for 2025 was to almost double her
inventory and the selection she offered.
“For now, we have no plans of adding more shelving or space for new
items, we will stick to the footprint we have,” she said. “This will
delay the growth of our business, making us a bit stagnant.’’
____
D’Innocenzio and Anderson reported from New York. Associated Press
Staff Writers Rodrique Ngowi in Billerica, Massachusetts and
Christopher Rugaber in Washington contributed to this report.
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