Trump's tariffs would reorder trade flows, raise costs, draw retaliation

FILE PHOTO: Shipping containers sit at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, California · Reuters

By David Lawder

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Iowa farmer Bob Hemesath is worried that U.S. agriculture will pay dearly if Donald Trump wins Tuesday's presidential election and makes good on a vow to swiftly impose a 60% tariff on Chinese goods and at least a 10% levy on all other imports.

It could be a much worse rerun of the Republican former president's 2018-2019 trade war with China that hit U.S. farm goods with retaliatory tariffs and shifted Beijing's purchases to Brazil and Argentina, said Hemesath, who grows corn and soybeans and raises hogs on 2,800 acres of land in northeastern Iowa.

"When we start putting tariffs on others, usually the retaliatory tariffs end up on American agricultural products," said Hemesath, who chairs the Farmers for Free Trade advocacy group.

"What I worry about is that when you do those kinds of things, you lose that market share, and you just don't get that market share back," he said. Hemesath declined to say who he was voting for in the election.

Economists say that Trump's tariff plans, likely his most consequential economic policy, would push U.S. import duty rates back up to 1930s-era levels, stoke inflation, collapse U.S.-China trade, draw retaliation and drastically reorder supply chains.

Hemesath's concerns were echoed in a recent study by the National Corn Growers Association and American Soybean Association, which forecast that a new China trade war could prompt deeper U.S. crop export losses, push down already depressed domestic prices and cement a shift of China's imports to Brazil and Argentina.

Trump, who is in a neck-and-neck race for the White House against Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, has called tariffs "the most beautiful word in the world" and argued that his plans would rebuild the U.S. manufacturing base, grow U.S. jobs and incomes and earn trillions of dollars in federal revenues over 10 years.

Economists universally agree tariffs are paid by the companies that import the products subject to the duties, and they either pass on the costs to consumers or accept lower profits.

The duties, if fully imposed, would raise effective average U.S. tariff levels to 17.7%, the highest since 1934, according to the conservative-leaning Tax Foundation. The plans have drawn comparisons to the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, which sharply raised U.S. tariffs, triggering retaliation and a global collapse of trade that helped worsen the Great Depression.

In the aftermath of World War Two, countries scrapped this "beggar-thy-neighbor" approach in favor of a rules-based trading system with much lower non-discriminatory tariffs and what is now the World Trade Organization at its core.