City
Epaper

Trump tariffs acted as tax on US consumers, raised inflation: Gita Gopinath

By IANS | Updated: October 8, 2025 11:35 IST

New Delhi, Oct 8 US President Donald Trump’s tariff proposals acted as a tax on US consumers, raised ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 8 US President Donald Trump’s tariff proposals acted as a tax on US consumers, raised inflation, and had no benefit to the American economy, said former IMF Chief Economist Gita Gopinath on Wednesday.

Slamming Trump’s "Liberation Day" tariffs, Gopinath said the scorecard has been negative for the last six months.

Trump proclaimed “Liberation Day” on April 2, when he announced the most sweeping tariff hike. He declared a national emergency over the US trade deficit and invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to authorise sweeping tariffs on foreign imports.

He aimed to correct what he described as decades of unfair trade barriers that had hurt American producers.

However, Gopinath stated that in the last six months, the tariffs neither improved the trade balance nor boosted manufacturing in America, as claimed by Trump. It brought no benefit to the US economy.

In a post on social media platform X, Gopinath said: “It is 6 months since 'Liberation Day' tariffs. What have US tariffs accomplished?”

“1. Raise revenue for the government? Yes. Quite substantially. Borne almost entirely by US firms and passed on some to US consumers. So it has worked like a tax on US firms/consumers. 2. Raise inflation? Yes, by small amounts overall. More substantially for household appliances, furniture, coffee. 3. Improve trade balance? No sign yet of that. 4. Improve US manufacturing? No sign yet of that. Overall, the score card is negative,” added the Harvard Economics Professor.

India was hit with a 25 per cent tariff in July, followed by an additional 25 per cent penalty on its purchases of Russian crude oil in August.

On September 26, Trump further announced plans to impose a 100 per cent tariff on branded and patented pharmaceutical products from October 1 unless companies set up production facilities in the US.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"Before you help me, I want to end your war": Trump hints at Ukraine ceasefire after call with Putin; maintains hard line on Iran's nuclear ambitions

EntertainmentOlivia Rodrigo sheds light on the 'most important' phase of love

NationalPM Modi announces ex-gratia for Dhar accident victims, expresses grief over loss of lives

Politics"LDF is most unpopular ever": Bindu Krishna confident of UDF sweep as exit polls favor opposition

Politics"Lotus is blooming": Keshav Prasad Maurya predicts sweeping BJP victories across 5 states

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyCentre aims $2 trillion export target by 2030-31

TechnologyMP pioneers in Green Bond-funded solar power in Jalud

TechnologyIndia’s economy strong, dynamic and set to sustain momentum despite global shocks: Jeffrey Sachs

TechnologyArjun Kapoor moves Delhi HC for protection of personality rights

TechnologySmartphones with satellite connectivity to touch 46 pc of global shipments by 2030: Report