the next wave of trade barriers
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The promise: why tariffs are sold as job savers Tariffs have long been justified as a way to shield home workers from unfair foreign competition. The logic runs as follows: Low-cost imports flood the market and local factories shut. By placing tariffs on such imports, governments raise them in priceRead more
The promise: why tariffs are sold as job savers
The reality: varied job outcomes
1. Temporary job protection
Tariffs can slow down layoffs in specific industries (steel, textiles, or ag). Workers in those sectors do typically see temporary job protection.
As an example, American steel tariffs in the 2000s did protect some steel jobs in the short run.
2. But jobs relocate, not just save
When tariffs raise the price of imports, industries that use the imports as inputs are negatively affected. Automakers or construction firms that rely on steel are more costly to make.
That can lead to employment decreases in downstream industries — typically of greater size than jobs saved. A classic analysis of American steel tariffs found that greater numbers of jobs were lost in steel-using industries than jobs saved in steel production.
3. Long-term competitiveness
If tariffs become permanent, domestic businesses lose the incentive to innovate or become modernized. That can lock in inefficiency and end up costing jobs anyway, as the international market continues to move forward.
The hidden sticker shock: shoppers cover the cost
The paradox
The bigger picture: security vs. efficiency
Human impact — who gains, who loses?
Losers:
Bottom line
Tariffs generate some jobs at home, but they tend to do so at a collective expense to consumers and the economy in general. They’re akin to putting a bandage on one part of the economy while quietly sapping the strength of the rest of the body.
If the intention is actually to protect workers, tariffs alone are not enough. They would need to be followed by retraining programs, innovation policy, and competitiveness investment — or otherwise, they are expensive band-aids that shift suffering around rather than curing it.
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