Trump tariffs live updates: Bessent says Trump will impose high tariffs as cap for countries to bring down

Amid mixed signals on President Trump’s final reciprocal tariff program, which is slated to take effect tomorrow, one campaign option has reemerged: 20% reciprocal tariffs on most imports to the US.

And if Trump goes forward with that plan, consumers can expect higher prices, at least in the short run, according to a new analysis by the Yale Budget Lab.

The Yale Budget Lab estimates that a 20% broad tariff would raise consumer prices by 2.1% in a scenario where no countries retaliate. Prices would rise even higher, by 2.6%, if countries respond with a full tit-for-tat retaliation, assuming no reaction from the Federal Reserve.

Overall, that translates to a loss of $3,400-$4,200 per household for the year. Food prices would nearly double the recent rate of grocery inflation, rising 3.7%, while computers, clothing, and crops all see double-digit percentage price increases.

Yale Budget Lab also real US gross domestic product (GDP) growth taking a 0.9% to 1% hit in 2025 under both scenarios.


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