Trump or Biden? Either way, US seems poised to preserve heavy tariffs on imports

sport2024-05-21 21:54:157917

WASHINGTON (AP) — As president, Donald Trump imposed a 25% tariff on foreign steel, which hurt Clips & Clamps Industries, a Michigan auto supplier — raising its materials prices, making it harder to compete with overseas rivals and costing it several contracts.

Jeff Aznavorian, the company president, thought he might enjoy some relief once Joe Biden entered the White House. Instead, Biden largely preserved Trump’s tariffs — on steel, aluminum and a mass of goods from China.

“It was a little surprising that an ideologically different administration would keep the policies so intact,’’ Aznavorian said, recalling how a previous Democratic president, Bill Clinton, had fought for freer trade. “That’s just so different from a 2024 Biden administration.’’

Trump and Biden agree on essentially nothing, from taxes and climate change to immigration and regulation. Yet on trade policy, the two presumptive presidential nominees have embraced surprisingly similar approaches. Which means that whether Biden or Trump wins the presidency, the United States seems poised to maintain a protectionist trade policy — a policy that experts say could feed inflation pressures.

Address of this article:http://juandenovaisland.tom-paine.com/content-25e599445.html

Popular

Hall of Fame outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. to lead Indianapolis 500 field in Corvette pace car

Xi Focus: Ringing in 2023, Xi Stresses Hard Work, Unity to Make Tomorrow's China a Better Place

Xi Focus: Xi Jinping Leads China's Drive Toward Rural Modernization

Xi Congratulates Cyril Ramaphosa on Re

With Djokovic awaiting the winner, Murray trails Hanfmann at rain

Xi Jinping Delivers Speech at Central Rural Work Conference

Xi Calls for Fostering Closer China

Chinese President Appoints New Ambassadors

LINKS