Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Washer tariff found to raise machine price $86

- CHRISTOPHE­R INGRAHAM

President Donald Trump has repeatedly sought to portray his tariffs on Chinese goods as a major windfall for the U.S. Treasury Department that has extracted “billions of dollars” from China. But the reality is that tariffs are typically absorbed by consumers in the form of higher prices.

And now a new study shows just how big that markup can be.

When economists at the University of Chicago and the Federal Reserve studied the 2018 duty on washing machines, they found the expected rise in retail prices from foreign manufactur­ers such as Samsung and LG. Surprising­ly, though, these brands also increased dryer prices. Then domestic manufactur­ers followed suit, simply because they could.

All told, the research shows, U.S. consumers are spending an additional $1.5 billion a year on washers and dryers as a result of the tariffs. That’s an extra $86 for each washing machine and $92 for each dryer, the authors estimate.

And less than 10 percent of that goes to the treasury — about $82.2 million — the study showed.

The authors ran their analysis using weekly price data on appliances from market research firm Gap Intelligen­ce. If the tariffs cost $82 million but consumers are paying $1.5 billion, where’s the rest of that money going? Foreign manufactur­ers are passing some costs on to consumers, while domestic ones are simply pocketing extra profits, according to the study.

“In addition to increased profitabil­ity of the domestic manufactur­ers, one other reason for the gap are cost increases for the foreign manufactur­ers associated with relocating production to the U.S.,” according to researcher Felix Tintelnot of the University of Chicago.

Manufactur­ers also capitalize­d on buyer habits when they bumped up the price of dryers, which were not subject to the tariffs. “Many consumers buy these goods in a bundle. Part of the price increase for washers was hidden by increasing the price of dryers,” Tintelnot said.

The tariffs were implemente­d in January 2018 in response to a complaint from Michiganba­sed Whirlpool about lowcost competitio­n from companies such as South Korea’s Samsung and LG. At the time, Whirlpool’s chairman, Jeff Fettig, framed the tariffs as a win for workers and consumers.

But the research released this week shows that U.S. consumers shouldered 125 percent to 225 percent of the costs of the washing machine tariffs. And the duty was mostly a dud on the job creation front.

U.S.-based manufactur­ers added about 1,800 jobs in response to the tariffs, researcher­s found. But at a total cost to consumers of about $1.5 billion, that works out to approximat­ely $815,000 for every new job created. That figure is roughly in line with other estimates on the per-job cost of tariffs in other industries. The typical cost of government-driven job creation works out to about $30,000 per job.

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