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Why Trump’s tariffs won’t last long

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Why Trump’s tariffs won’t last long

This article is an on-site version of Free Lunch newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Thursday and Sunday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newsletters

Welcome back. Two weeks ago, I outlined five optimistic scenarios for the global economy. The first was “Donald Trump dilutes his tariff plans”. Now that the US president has unveiled his historic package of import duties, I return to this idea. This week, I sought the argument for why US tariff rates won’t stay high for long. Here’s what I found.

First, the economic pain. In the near term, most forecasters expect Trump’s import duties to raise prices and slow economic activity. But the White House may have overestimated its ability to withstand political pressure as tariffs kick in.

Consumer sentiment is falling in anticipation of bad times ahead. But as the latest tariffs actually hit supply chains, it will plummet.

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Durable goods and non durable items, such as food and clothing, account for 30 per cent of US household spending. These will, to varying degrees, be hit by higher duties. (One estimate suggests the price of an iPhone 16 Pro Max could jump from $1,599 to $2,300, if all tariff costs are passed on to consumers.)

Trump’s pre-April 2 tariffs were already pushing up manufacturers’ prices. Given the extent and scale of his latest blitz, inflation could rise higher and faster than anticipated. Blanket tariffs limit the ability of US suppliers to find cheaper alternatives quickly. Overall, Allianz Research expects around two-thirds of companies to pass on costs to consumers.

The non-price effects of Trump’s agenda are also piling up: so-called Department of Government Efficiency-linked lay-off announcements totalled more than 280,000 over the past two months, while existing tariffs and uncertainty are restraining hiring and investment plans.

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This builds on economic concerns before Trump came in. A reminder: prices have risen 20 per cent on average since the start of January 2021 (with the cheapest goods facing even higher inflation), and debt distress is rising in Republican states (which could be exacerbated if the US Federal Reserve keeps rates higher for longer to ward off tariff-linked inflation spirals). In all, Americans’ threshold for quick, further pain is lower than the president thinks.

The targeted approach trade partners are taking in their retaliation will worsen this. For instance, the EU is devising levies aimed at Republican-held states — including soyabeans in Louisiana, beef in Kansas and produce in Alabama — in response to Trump’s steel and aluminium tariffs.

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This matters because approval ratings track consumer sentiment closely, particularly for Republicans when Trump is in power. And political concerns were rising within the GOP even before the president’s “reciprocal” tariffs.

Data collated from YouGov by John Burn-Murdoch in the FT shows Trump’s economic approval among his non-Maga 2024 voters rapidly falling. Broader Republican consumer sentiment is now also at a turning point.

Since Trump unveiled his latest tariffs, discontent has spread. In the Senate, a largely symbolic resolution to overturn the tariffs against Canada was passed with Republican support on Wednesday. Later in the week, the FT reported a rift emerging between top Republicans on trade policy. GOP senator Ted Cruz (usually a staunch Trump supporter) also warned of a potential “bloodbath” for the Republicans at the November 2026 midterm elections.

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Businesses may also become more vocal, at least in private, notes Marko Papic, chief strategist at BCA Research. “Existing US corporations — which employ Americans at a greater level than some theoretical manufacturing renaissance would — are going to face steep costs, and will lose business in foreign markets.”

Major S&P 500 tech, banking and industrial stocks have plunged. Apple experienced its biggest ever one-day valuation wipeout. The tech bros and big business networks will put pressure on contacts in the administration, and senior officials’ stock portfolios will suffer.

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Small business owners, who employ almost half of the private sector workforce and are an important Republican constituent, are now also feeling less optimistic. Plans to end “de minimis” customs exemptions globally would be particularly painful for them.

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In financial markets, it will take something spectacular to shift Trump, given his flippancy about plunging stock prices so far.

“It’s a bit like asking a pyromaniac to put out a fire he started,” said Jonas Goltermann, deputy chief markets economist at Capital Economics. “There is a degree of pain, whether in equities or other markets, that would prompt some sort of a rethink. But it is further away than most thought.”

Could bond markets force him to change course? Right now US Treasury yields are falling, as investors still consider them safe haven assets. But in one tail-risk scenario, fiscal recklessness (for example, stimulus measures amid unreliable tariff revenue, Doge savings or growth projections), a rising term premium (given Trump’s unpredictability) and higher inflation or interest rate expectations (if high prices become entrenched) could fuel a sell-off event. “In that case, presumably [Scott] Bessent would have to try convince Trump that his approach is not tenable,” said Goltermann.

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Either way, the cumulative pressure from households, business, markets and Republicans on Trump will mount even faster now tariffs are in full flow. Delays, exemptions and reductions are possible.

Could the administration soften the blow by expediting tax-cutting measures? Garrett Watson, director of policy analysis at the Tax Foundation, is sceptical. He said plans to extend existing tax cuts may not be considered a gain by households. Nor would they cancel out the income hit from tariffs.

Watson added that the administration’s plans for additional tax cuts might help. But the $2.9tn Trump’s tariffs are estimated to raise will not even offset the extension of the expiring tax cuts. (Plus, tariff revenues are difficult to forecast.) “Timing is also a challenge, the negative impacts of the tariffs accrue now, while the tax package will take further time to pass and even longer to see bottom-line benefits.”

Even if we assume the president can brush aside the political pressure, there are other ways tariffs could come down.

Interim shortages might lead to some limited tariff reductions. “Any price spikes from tariff hikes in totemic items may trigger emergency moves to lower prices, doing that quickly almost always involves opening up to imports,” said Simon Evenett, professor at the IMD Business School, who points out that the administration is, ironically, trying to deal with the current egg shortage in part via trade.

Next, a partial rollback could be plausible if trade partners offer him sufficient concessions. Indeed, Trump has already shown a willingness to negotiate. Allianz Research’s baseline scenario is for several bilateral deals by the end of this year to reduce the US effective tariff rate by about 40 per cent.

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Then there’s the bigger picture. Trump hopes foreign investors will set up factories in America to avoid tariffs. Given the time and cost involved, a swift job and investment spurt that offsets domestic economic pain is unlikely. Global manufacturers don’t know how long tariffs will last, don’t like uncertainty and need reliable supply chains (domestic or international).

But the transition to America becoming a self-sufficient manufacturing hub is a costlier, more protracted and less desirable process than Trump thinks it is. The global goods industry is more interconnected and complex than it was in the late 19th century when the US had high tariffs for an extensive period. The opportunity cost of being behind a protectionist wall is far greater today (see last week’s newsletter).

International factory owners know this. Most could decide to sit it out, which would raise pressure on Trump. That also means US manufacturing is unlikely to grow to the point where reducing tariffs in the future is harder, as established, coddled industries tend to lobby to keep them.

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Sure, levies could even go higher in the near term. But between the rapidly rising economic pain, political pressure and the president’s fondness for negotiations, there is perhaps a greater chance of tariffs coming down sooner than feared.

“He will certainly pay a political price if there is nothing to show at the end of all this chaos. And that is a real possibility,” said Maurice Obstfeld, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

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Indeed, even if Trump doesn’t bow to the pressure in his term, it’s hard to see how any subsequent administration could then justify keeping his levies in place.

How long do you think Trump’s tariffs will last? Send your thoughts to freelunch@ft.com or on X @tejparikh90.

Food for thought

After remaining constant for over three decades, productivity at US restaurants surged during the pandemic and has remained high. Why? A new NBER working paper suggests the rise of takeaway culture, aided by food-delivery apps, is the secret sauce.

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Ex-Disney Worker Who Hacked Menus Gets 3 Years in Prison

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Ex-Disney Worker Who Hacked Menus Gets 3 Years in Prison

A former employee of Walt Disney World who hacked into menus used by its restaurants and edited them — changing prices, adding profanity and altering listed allergens — was sentenced to three years in prison by a federal judge in Florida this week.

None of the changes, including falsified information about food allergens that could have been harmful to visitors, ever appeared before the public, according to court records. The menu alterations were caught and court records show that none of the changes ever reached the printing stage.

The former employee, Michael Scheuer of Winter Garden, Fla., was sentenced on Wednesday in federal court in Orlando, Fla., after pleading guilty in January to one count of computer fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft.

Mr. Scheuer, 40, was ordered to pay restitution of about $620,000 to Disney and $70,000 to the unidentified software company that provides Disney with its menu creation program.

While court documents do not mention Disney World, menus that were entered into evidence in Mr. Scheuer’s case are from the hundreds of restaurants at Walt Disney World in Orlando.

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Disney World representatives did not respond to messages seeking comment.

In early June 2024, Mr. Scheuer had returned from paternity leave, court documents show. A few days later, he had an argument with a supervisor about menu creation, according to the documents, and he was told that he would be suspended.

Instead, he was fired for unspecified misconduct, the documents state.

An investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation later revealed that, beginning around that time and over approximately the next three months, there were multiple hacks into servers that hosted the menu creation program.

Those changes included price cuts or hikes of a few dollars, profanities and altering allergens in certain items.

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On a drink called the “Giddy-Up” — a blend of vodka, lemonade and iced tea — he lowered the price by $2, according to court records, and took two ounces off a 10-ounce filet mignon. In another instance, “shellfish” was changed to “hellfish.”

On a couple of menus, either the prices or the descriptions of the items disappeared.

He changed a wine region — Golden, Colo. — to the location of a mass shooting, Aurora, Colo. He also edited “Infamous Goose” — high-quality imported wine from New Zealand — to “Infamous Moose.”

More crucially, Mr. Scheuer edited certain menu items, falsely showing that they were safe for people with allergies to peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish and milk, according to his plea agreement.

Prosecutors said “the discreet way in which these changes were made was likely by design, specifically to avoid detection.”

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But Mr. Scheuer’s lawyer, David Haas, said that his client had only been trying to get the attention of Disney so that it would respond to him.

“He knew the menu changes would be identified in Disney’s extensive menu review process,” Mr. Haas said in a court document.

Disney had indeed noticed, and it had contacted the F.B.I., identifying Mr. Scheuer as a possible suspect. In September, the F.B.I. executed a search warrant at Mr. Scheuer’s home and seized several electronic devices.

The criminal complaint also shows that Mr. Scheuer blocked 14 Disney employees from their company accounts through denial-of-service attacks. Some of the targeted workers were former colleagues involved in his firing, according to court records.

On one occasion, Mr. Scheuer drove to the home of one of the targeted employees shortly before 11 p.m., walked to the front door and gave a thumbs-up to the Ring doorbell camera before leaving, court records show.

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Gregory W. Kehoe, the interim U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Florida, said that Mr. Scheuer’s actions were at least partly attributable to a mental health episode. Prosecutors asked for a 70-month sentence.

Mr. Haas said in an interview on Friday that “Mr. Scheuer remains remorseful and apologetic to his former co-workers,” adding that he was grateful to the judge for imposing only a 36-month sentence.

Sheelagh McNeill contributed research.

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Republicans plan to scrap US audit regulator

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Republicans plan to scrap US audit regulator

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Republican lawmakers are planning to shut down the US audit regulator, which was founded in the wake of the Enron scandal more than two decades ago, as part of a reform package designed to deliver Donald Trump’s deregulatory agenda.

The proposal to eliminate the independent Public Company Accounting Oversight Board was published late on Friday by the leadership of the House Committee on Financial Services, for inclusion in the giant tax and spending bill being considered by Congress.

Under the draft legislation, a levy on listed companies and broker-dealers that funds the PCAOB would be scrapped and the organisation’s responsibilities would be folded into the Securities and Exchange Commission.

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The PCAOB was set up to oversee audit standards and conduct regular inspections of firms that audit US public companies after the collapse of Enron in 2001 exposed shortcomings in the previous self-regulatory regime.

Accounting firms have chafed against the activist leadership of chair Erica Williams, under whom the agency imposed tough new standards and extracted record fines in enforcement actions.

Any effort to eliminate the agency is likely to meet resistance from Democrats and may not receive the full endorsement of audit firms.

The Center for Audit Quality, which represents the largest firms, has called for the agency to be more responsive to accounting firms, but has previously stopped short of calling for its elimination.

“Oversight models may evolve, but what should not change is the profession’s accountability to the capital markets and the need for a system that supports maintaining high standards of audit quality,” CAQ chief executive Julie Bell Lindsay said on Saturday.

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While PCAOB employees could be given the chance to transfer their roles to the SEC, they would in many cases have to take pay cuts as the organisation is not subject to government pay scales.

Critics have argued that such a move would substantially disrupt the audit-firm inspection regime.

But Christina Ho, a PCAOB board member who has opposed several of Williams’s signature initiatives, said that SEC salaries could be higher than those in many government agencies. “The SEC has not had difficulty attracting and retaining talent,” she said.

The committee’s draft legislation also scraps any unallocated funds under a $1bn green retrofitting programme for housing brought under the Inflation Reduction Act, Joe Biden’s landmark climate legislation, and slashes the budget of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 

It faces procedural hurdles, however. The full House Committee on Financial Services will consider the legislation in the coming days, but whether it will be included in the tax and spending bill, known as a reconciliation bill, will depend on negotiations within the Republican leadership in the House and Senate and whether it is deemed a budgetary measure.

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Sandy Peters, head of global advocacy at the CFA Institute, a professional body for investors, said the creation of the PCAOB led to dramatic improvements in audit quality.

“The largest and most efficient capital markets need a strong, apolitical and independent audit regulator and accounting standard setter,” she said. “If capital formation is a priority for the administration, this disrupts that.”

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Pope Francis’ funeral attendees were required to wear black, but Trump wore blue: ’No respect’ | Today News

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Pope Francis’ funeral attendees were required to wear black, but Trump wore blue: ’No respect’ | Today News

The dress code for Pope Francis’s funeral required men to wear a dark suit with a black tie and a black button on the left lapel, while women were asked to wear a long black dress, gloves, and a veil. The attire protocol is now the subject of chatter on social media, with Trump being accused of ditching the dress code by wearing blue, while First Lady Melania’s outfit – an all-black ensemble accentuated by a dramatic veil – was compared to the ‘hijab’.

Melania Trump’s Outfit Sparks Comparison to Hijab

A comment from Iranian academic Foad Izadi went viral after he shared a photo of Melania in her mourning outfit, saying that the hijab across the world stands for modesty, chastity, and simplicity. “In a world obsessed with appearances, hijab quietly proclaims purity, dignity, and humility. Today, at the Pope’s funeral, Melania Trump stood — a silent witness to these timeless values,” one person wrote, sharing Izadi’s post.

Read | Pope Francis’ coffin sealed after some 250,000 mourners pay their respects; final pictures of private ceremony emerge

Criticism Over Donald Trump’s Choice of Attire

Trump’s blue suit and blue tie also caught the attention of netizens – for the wrong reasons – as commentators claimed his choice of attire was ‘disrespectful’ and made him ‘stand out’.
 

“Just watching the Pope’s funeral. Trump is the only one not wearing a dark suit. No respect,” one person wrote on social media. “President Trump at Pope Francis’ funeral…the only one in a blue suit!!” another commented.

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“Trump can’t even be bothered to wear a black suit to the Pope’s funeral! And not capable to sit up straight in his chair! Put to shame by the rest of the worlds royalty and leaders!,” a user wrote. 

Former President Joe Biden opted for a blue tie at the service as well, pairing it with a dark black suit instead of the traditional black tie.

Meanwhile, President Zelensky skipped the tie altogether, arriving in an all-black ensemble featuring a utility-style jacket in place of a classic suit jacket.

In pics | Not Trump, this person sat next to Zelensky at Pope Francis’ funeral; Prince William, Biden, and more attend

Other Dignitaries and the Traditional Mantilla

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Melania wasn’t alone in wearing a traditional liturgical mantilla, with Jill Biden, Queen Letizia, Princess Charlene of Monaco, Queen Rania of Jordan, Queen Mathilde of Belgium, Queen Mary of Denmark, Queen Silvia of Sweden, and Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway all donning gothic veils.

Several female guests, including Brigitte Macron, Olena Zelenska, and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, opted for stylish black suits instead of dresses at the funeral.

The Role of Fashion in Religious Ceremonies

It might seem disrespectful to focus on fashion on a day like this, but senior clerics have previously shared that clothing has its own part to play in religion.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the Archbishop of New York, told Metro:

“The Church and the Catholic imagination are all about three things: truth, goodness and beauty. That’s why we’re into things such as art, culture, music, literature and, yes, even fashion.”

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Why Didn’t Everyone Wear Black to the Pope’s Funeral?

Catholic clerics had their own dress code for the funeral, which many people watching at home would have noticed.

Some wore especially striking outfits, with different members of the Church dressed in red, white, and purple, and decorated with gold and jewels.

To some, the devout might have appeared as though they had stepped straight out of the 2018 Met Gala, but for Catholics, the attire was perfectly traditional.

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