this post was submitted on 07 Apr 2025
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Heiner Herkenhoff, managing director of the German Bankers Association

“There is no point in striking back hastily with additional measures,” Herkenhoff said

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Yes, put it that way i agree it does not sound good.

A company in the EU for example will be forced to lower its volume of exports of goods and raw materials even further to the US as Americans won't be able to "afford as much". Especially with an export surcharge fee payed for by American importers.

Though we forget Americans will now be forced to pay more for raw materials imports. This means anything they sell or export will also now be more expensive. If not impossible to manufacture.

Why should we make things affordable for Americans and not our local population?

A export surcharge fee could mean that any EU companies still currently reliant on goods or raw material imports from the US for the time being have time to adjust without a blanket tax being applied.

My argument is that a "blanket tax" on imports affects the "working class" directly with increased prices of goods locally. If countries all unanimously "fire back" with surcharges on exports to the US, it affects the whole American supply chain with a increase in cost of goods.

On top of the Tarrifs the US government is already making its US citizens pay.