The Tariff Trap: Who Really Pays When Politicians Tax the Border
A tax on them. A punishment for foreign producers. A way to protect American workers. A way to bring industry home. That is the sales pitch. But the mechanics are colder. A tariff is not paid by some foreign factory owner standing at the dock with a checkbook. It is usually paid first by the importer bringing the product into the country. From there, the cost moves through the chain. Importer. Distributor. Retailer. Small business. Consumer. Each one tries to pass the heat forward. Big corporations can absorb some of it, delay it, shift suppliers, pressure vendors, or use pricing power to spread the pain across thousands of products. Small businesses do not have that luxury. They eat the margin, raise prices, cut inventory, or close. That is why tariff wars do not hit evenly. The political class says, “We are making foreign countries pay.” The invoice says something different. The cashier says something different. The small business owner says something different. The family budget say...