Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Tariffs Trump Consumer Spending

 Financial FAQs

“Advance estimates of U.S. retail and food services sales for May 2025, adjusted for seasonal variation and holiday and trading-day differences, but not for price changes, were $715.4 billion, down 0.9 percent (±0.5 percent) from the previous month, and up 3.3 percent (±0.5 percent) from May 2024.” U.S. Census Bureau

Retail sales have declined in four out of five months since January, a sign that consumers don’t like trade wars; i.e., not knowing what will happen to prices and whether shelves will soon be empty if  President Trump can’t finalize any of the trade deals that he says are almost done.

There’s even more that affects consumer spending and economic growth—the new federal budget still in negotiation and immigration crackdown that will become evident in coming months.

Consumers and businesses are complaining about the uncertainties, which is why President Trump keeps postponing the deadlines while pushing for better “deals”. He can keep promising, though even the UK tariff tax hasn’t been finalized.

The Senate could shave as much as $1 trillion from Medicaid spending in the Senate version of the bill not yet out of committees, according to reports.

And it will increase the federal debt by $2.8 trillion, which will drive up interest rates because bond investors will demand higher returns for the added risk of default. Higher interest rates will then slow growth, while rising import prices from snarled supply chains caught up in the tariff war will cause higher inflation, which is the other half of the stagnation + inflation (stagflation) equation that will result.

Motor vehicles and parts as well as construction sales declined in the retail sales report, as did healthcare and gardening supply sales. Consumers have also dined out less over the past two months, another sign that consumers are becoming more cautious in their spending habits.

All the Trump administration seems to be able to do at present is round up undocumented immigrants, which should cause even more serious damage to economic growth. Immigrants also like to shop, and now there are fewer of them working or shopping due to the growing arrests of undocumented immigrants.

According to estimates on its website from the Center for Migration Studies of New York (CMS) and other groups, as many as 8.3 million undocumented immigrants work in the US economy, or 5.2 percent of the workforce. They work in construction (1.5 million), restaurants (1 million), agriculture and farms (320,000), landscaping (300,000), and food processing and manufacturing (200,000), among other occupations.

That’s a lot of undocumented immigrants in the workforce, and the Trump administration wants to deport one million of them per year. As the numbers of working immigrants decline so will the amounts they produce, which also effects the family members who are American citizens.

And guess where many of them work—in red states with lots of agriculture for which immigrants are needed. That, and the draconian cuts to the health services will hurt MAGA-dominated red states the most that have fewer public services.

This is Economics 101, folks. Without more workers our economy can’t grow. And without paying for our debts, interest rates will continue to rise. And with tariffs at historically high levels, as high as they were in 1930, the cost of almost everything will rise. It’s not bringing down inflation on ‘Day 1’ or any other day of this administration.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

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