US consumers, importers take biggest hit from tariffs, ECB study finds

US consumers, importers take biggest hit from tariffs, ECB study finds

FRANKFURT, March 30 (Reuters) - U.S. consumers and importers take the vast majority of the financial hit ‌from tariffs but trade volumes also suffer, ‌resulting in a negative shock for exporters, too, a European Central ​Bank Economic Bulletin article said on Monday.

Reuters

The U.S. imposed a raft of tariffs on most trading partners last year and economists have been debating who would take the ‌biggest hit after ⁠the Trump administration predicted that exporters would pay the cost.

"Exporters to the United States ⁠are absorbing only a small fraction of higher tariff-related costs," the ECB's study said. "Their costs are falling mostly on ​domestic importers ​and consumers."

The U.S. consumer ​now pays about a ‌third of the cost and over the longer term, this share could rise to over half as U.S. firms exhaust their ability to absorb costs, the ECB said.

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This implies that U.S. firms would absorb around 40% ‌of higher tariff costs in ​the longer term, the article ​added.

But European exporters ​are not immune either as the estimated ‌impact of tariffs on import ​volumes is large, ​the ECB predicted.

The paper said in the case of product categories that are still traded under ​tariffs, a 10% ‌increase in the duties would result in a ​4.3% decline in import volumes.

(Reporting by Balazs ​Koranyi; Editing by Jamie Freed)

 

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