Kai Ryssdal explains that the current rise in consumer prices is a lagging effect of tariffs. For months, businesses absorbed these costs to protect market share. Now, with squeezed margins, they are forced to pass the costs on to consumers, resulting in a delayed but significant inflationary impact.

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Instead of immediately passing tariff costs to consumers, US corporations are initially absorbing the shock. They are mitigating the impact by reducing labor costs and accepting lower profitability, which explains the lag between tariff implementation and broad consumer inflation.

The Federal Reserve Chair has explicitly stated that current inflation above the target is driven by tariffs on goods. This is being masked by disinflation in the services sector, suggesting that underlying, broad-based inflationary pressures in the economy are actually quite weak.

Economic analysis debunks the political claim that foreign nations pay for tariffs. In reality, there is a near-complete cost pass-through to American buyers. U.S. consumers ultimately shoulder 96% of the tariff burden through higher prices, while foreign firms absorb only a negligible 4%.

The inflationary impact of tariffs and anti-migration policies is just starting. Businesses and migrants face complex, irreversible decisions that create a year-long lag before supply shocks and price increases become visible in the broader economy.

The inflationary impact of tariffs is appearing slower than economists expected. Companies are hesitating to be the first to raise prices, fearing being publicly called out by politicians and losing customers to competitors who are waiting out the trade policy uncertainty.

If tariffs are reduced following a court ruling, companies will experience immediate cost relief. However, these savings are passed to consumers slowly, over two to three quarters. This delay creates a temporary tailwind for corporate profit margins before prices on the shelf fall.

Robert Kaplan cautions against dismissing inflation risks. Many businesses are still absorbing tariff costs or working through pre-tariff inventory. He believes the full price impact will be passed on to consumers in 2026, potentially keeping inflation stickier than markets currently expect.

The economic impact of tariffs is not an immediate, one-time price adjustment. Instead, Boston Fed President Collins characterizes it as a "long one-off" process where the full effect can take months or even a year to filter through the economy. This prolonged adjustment period extends uncertainty and complicates inflation forecasting.

Contrary to the populist framing of his trade policy, recent analysis reveals that American consumers bear almost the entire financial burden (94%) of tariffs. This policy acts as an unnecessary 2% tax on the economy, reducing prosperity without fostering significant growth or innovation.

Tariffs are creating a stagflationary effect on the economy. This is visible in PMI data, which shows muted business activity while the "prices paid" component remains high. This combination of slowing growth and rising costs acts as a significant "speed break" on the economy without stopping it entirely.