Select date

May 2024
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

The Tariff War Will Affect the Prices and Availability of THESE Items

8-4-2018 < SGT Report 82 1457 words
 

by Daisy Luther and M.K. Matthews, The Organic Prepper:


By now, unless you have been living in a Wifi-free deadzone, you’ve heard about the hundreds of billions in tariffs that the United States and China are flinging at one another like ninja throwing stars. When you’re hearing numbers like “100 billion dollars” it may seem like this is in an entirely different universe than the one in which you exist.


Unfortunately, that’s incorrect.


You can expect up to a 40% increase in the cost of all sorts of things. (We’ll get to those things in a moment.) First, let’s talk about tariffs so that everyone knows what’s going on.



Fortune explains:


Put simply, a tariff is a tax typically imposed on imported goods. The idea is that the tariff will make foreign-made products more expensive, driving consumers to turn to alternatives from domestic manufacturers who are not subject to the tax, and thus can charge less. In theory, this boosts the economy of the country imposing tariffs.


Trump imposed the first set of tariffs on Chinese goods to punish the country for intellectual property theft that he says has caused the U.S. economic damage…


…As of February, the U.S. also had a record-high $375.2 billion trade deficit with China, meaning it spends considerably more on Chinese imports than it makes on exports sent to China. Trump has been vocal in his desire to erase that deficit, calling it unsustainable. Tariffs are one strategy for leveling that playing field.


When Trump announced the first round of tariffs on China, it was seen as a declaration of a trade war — a progressive effort by the two nations to damage each other economically, mainly through taxes and trade restrictions. That’s why China answered Trump’s tariffs with a slew of its own taxes, and why Trump subsequently threatened to impose an additional $100 billion in tariffs on Chinese goods. (source)


So, to make a long story short, China is going to slap a tariff on things we export to them, making them up 15% or so higher in price for the consumer. This means that in all likelihood, the price increase can decrease China’s demand for the goods we export to them. (Find a list of items that the Chinese plan to charge tariffs on here.) This could hit farmers the hardest when demand for the goods they export decreases due to the higher prices.


A lobbying group for US farmers pleaded with the administration not to go forward with the tariffs, fearing retaliation by China, one of the largest buyers of US crops.


“We continue to urge the administration to listen to farmers across rural America who can’t afford new taxes on their exports,” Max Baucus, a former Democratic senator from Montana and co-chairman of Farmers for Free Trade, said in a statement. (source)


Now, in the United States, our government will add a tariff to the price of things like steel, pork, ingredients for medications, and a host of other items. When we go to the store to purchase the affected items, we’ll suffer sticker shock when we see that the price is anywhere from 10% to 40% higher than it was just a few weeks ago.


Now, let’s get to the nitty-gritty.


What will be affected?
It’s shocking to see how many essential items are dependent on foreign suppliers. There are more than 1300 products to which the US has proposed to add a 25% tariff. You can go here to find the full list and we’ll hit some of the highlights in this summary:


Tires, tire retreading products, all rubber products including but not limited to stoppers, caps, lids, hoses, belts, tubes, pipes etc. This will affect everything that rolls or is contained.
Antifreeze and de-icing fluids
Iron and iron alloys and steel products
Aluminum and alloys
Nuclear reactors and parts
Central heating units and parts, furnace burners and all parts, furnaces, ovens, and water heaters,
Turbines of all kinds, combustion piston engines, ignitions, compressors
Hydraulic engines, pneumatic engines, turbo engines
Pumps of all kinds
Machinery for food production commercial and home use
Papermaking and bookmaking, anything printed
Cartons, boxes, containers for mailing and shipping
Textile machines, any and everything to do with needlework of any kind in textiles
Metalworks: Anything to do with machinery involved in this industry, drilling, milling, grinding, smoothing, shaping, punching, polishing, etc.
Woodworking machinery of any all kinds
Cast iron parts and products
Chainsaws and parts
Cash registers
Anything to do with computers, electronics, magnetic storage, whole or in parts
Medical devices
Microwaves
TVs
Car computer components,
Concrete mixers
Earthmoving, crushing, grinding, and sorting machinery of all kinds
Glass optic machinery
Assembly machinery of all kinds
Vacuum molding machinery
Thermoforming machinery
Rope and cable manufacturing machinery, both metal and fiber
Floor polishers,
Trash compactors
Pulleys
Ball bearings
Welders
Electric motors
Generators of all applications from large to small
Electromagnetics
Lab equipment for all applications
Broadcast equipment
Safety control equipment (flight record data box for example)
Railway and shipping equipment of any and all types
Tractors
Motor vehicles of all kinds. If it rolls it’s on the list.
If it flies it’s on the list as well as the parts to repair or assemble
If it floats it’s on the list.
Satellites of all kinds and all parts


And it isn’t just mechanical goods and electronics. A large number of medications and medical supplies will be affected:


Coenzyme Q10 (ubidecarenone) heart health supplement increases oxygen
Quinone drugs including Malaria testing kits
Aromatic drugs derived from carboxylic acids with additional oxygen function, and their derivatives
Amfetamine (INN) benzfetamine (INN), dexamfetamine (INN), etilamfetamine used to treat ADHD, hyperactivity, narcolepsy, athletic performance and cognitive enhancer
antidepressants, tranquilizers and other psychotherapeutic agents, monoamine drugs
cardiovascular drugs of amino-compounds with oxygen function
dermatological agents and local anesthetics
Lidocaine
oxygen increase breathing drugs for cardio patients and asthmatics
Anesthesia drugs
Thyroid drugs, hormone drugs
TB drugs
Anti-malaria drugs
Immunological products and drugs
Vaccines for human medicine
Vaccines for veterinary medicine
Human blood; animal blood prepared for therapeutic, prophylactic, diagnostic uses; toxins, cultures of micro-organisms
Antibiotics
Diabetes drugs, testing strips, syringes
Asthma drugs
Ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, norephedrine – vasodilators
Other medications containing alkaloids or derivatives
Medicaments containing vitamin B2 synthesized from aromatic or mod. aromatic compounds, in dosage form or packed for retail
Medicaments containing vitamin B12 synthesized from aromatic or mod. aromatic compounds, in dosage form or packed for retail
Medicaments containing vitamin E synthesized from aromatic or mod. aromatic compounds, in dosage form or packed
Adhesive dressings and other articles having an adhesive layer, coated or impregnated with pharmaceutical substances, packed for retail
Herbicides
Triethanolamine will affect surfactants (any detergent), emulsifiers, and cosmetics
Sterile surgical catgut, suture materials, tissue adhesives for wound closure, laminaria, laminaria tents, and absorbable hemostatic.
Algins used as thickening or stabilizing agents in foodstuffs and other products.
Drugs used to dilate the cervix
Blood-grouping reagents – medical blood tests
Opacifying preparation for X-ray examination; diagnostic reagent designed to be administered to the patient such as Barium for GI series, dyes, and stains for other radiologic tests
Antigens or antisera antiserum. A serum containing antibodies that are specific for one or more antigens. Also called immune serum. Human or animal serum containing one or more antibodies that are specific for one or more antigens and are administered to confer immunity.
Thorium – coats tungsten filaments used in old-fashioned light bulbs, TV’s, electronics, etc.
Dental cement and other dental fillings; bone reconstruction cement
Chemical contraceptive preparations based on hormones or spermicides, birth control
Gel preparation use human/veterinary medicine lubricant in surgical operations, physical exam, or coupling agent between body & medical instrument, such as KY Jelly
Appliances identifiable for ostomy use


Are we screwed?
Maybe, maybe not. There’s no easy answer.


First of all, this hasn’t happened yet. It probably will, but so far these tariffs don’t exist. However, I advise you plan like it’s a “done deal.” If there are things you’ll be purchasing anyway, it doesn’t hurt to get ahead.


Secondly, this may end up creating more industry and jobs in the US. It’s really impossible to say whether that will be the end result or not. But one thing is sure, and I’ve written about it numerous times: consuming more than we produce is a dangerous way to live.


Finally, many of these things are products that we’ve lived without for centuries. Your budget may be tighter, your expenses may be higher, or you may just end up finding a workaround. It’s important to know about these things, but it’s even more important not to panic and to use this knowledge to empower yourself. You may have to revisit your budget if any of these things are essential and figure out where to cut so that you can still afford to purchase the needed items.


How do we prep for this?
Read over the lists above and take the time to go over to the government’s press release and read it over. When you’re reading, make a list of the items most likely to affect you and your family.


Read More @ TheOrganicPrepper.ca



Print