CBO says foreign companies could pick up some tariff costs
The Congressional Budget Office slashed its tariff revenue forecast to reflect new data on the highest import duties the U.S. has seen in nearly a century.
The CBO, which Congress created to help evaluate economic and budgetary policies, said the new projections show tariff changes will reduce deficits by $3 trillion over the next decade. That’s down from the CBO’s earlier estimate of $4 trillion in August.
The latest update from CBO Director Phillip Swagel found the increase in tariffs implemented since President Donald Trump took office would decrease primary deficits by $2.5 trillion over 11 years if the higher tariffs persist throughout the 2025–2035 period. By reducing the need for borrowing, those tariffs will lower federal interest costs on debt by $500 billion.
“Roughly two-thirds of the downward revisions result from adjustments to reflect new data,” according to the report.
The new projections assume foreign businesses would pick up more of the costs than initially expected.
“We had previously projected that foreign exporters would not reduce their prices to offset increased tariff rates. We now project that foreign exporters will reduce their prices by an amount equivalent to 5% of the increase in tariff rate,” according to the report.
That 5% assumption is “consistent with evidence from increases in tariff rates on China that were implemented in 2018 and 2019.”
That could help U.S. consumers frustrated with high costs.
“As a result, the cost of imported goods for U.S. businesses and consumers rises by less than we had previously projected, leading to a smaller decline in imports,” according to the CBO report.
A recent Goldman Sachs report found that U.S. consumers will pay 55% of the costs resulting from Trump’s tariffs, U.S. businesses will pay 22%, and foreign exporters will pay 18%. That report said that most tariffs will be passed on to American consumers as businesses adjust prices in the coming months.
The CBO projections come with uncertainty, especially around how Trump could change tariffs over time. Trump has already made dozens of unilateral changes to tariff rates as he looks to give America a trade advantage around the world.
“One source of uncertainty about these projections is that the Administration could change how tariff policies are administered,” the report noted. “If mechanisms for additional exemptions were implemented, the tariff duties collected could decline substantially.”
The CBO, created in 1974, has little practice with estimating tariff revenue.
“The United States has not implemented increases in tariffs of this size in many decades, so there is little empirical evidence to guide our estimates of their long-term effects. Consumers and businesses could be more or less responsive to increases in tariffs of this size, which would cause trade and revenues to diverge from projected amounts,” Swagel said.
A group of small businesses and states have challenged Trump’s authority to use tariffs without congressional authority. The CBO said it is watching that case, which remains pending before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Latest News Stories
Border Patrol agents arrest illegal CDL drivers in upstate New York
ACA premiums projected to rise 26% in 2026, far above U.S. inflation
Michigan law firm sued over alleged racial bias in diversity scholarships
WATCH: Libertarian concerns persist as IL Sec of State announces IDs for Apple Wallet
Illinois quick hits: Pritzkers meets the Pope; Broadview to close street outside ICE facility
DHS launches new initiative to crack down on student visa fraud
‘Ghost projects’ haunt power grid planners and taxpayers
WATCH: $10M campaign finance fine dropped; Digital ID unveiled, Chicagoans speak up
ICE, Border Patrol agents experience historic surge of vehicular attacks this year
Will County Executive Committee Delays Vote on School Choice Referendum
Poll: Americans support eliminating Department of Education
Exclusive: Nonprofit leader urges fight against ‘woke capitalism’
As pennies disappear, businesses turn to hoarding, rounding
Chicago tax proposals draw concern over legality, ‘economic death spiral’