Tariffs are country specific. I’m talking about taxing American companies for manufacturing outside the US, regardless of location. Or for offshoring profits offshore to avoid taxes (the pharmaceutical industry pays almost a zero effective tax rate)..A tariff is exactly that - it's an artificial method of increasing the cost to access a market. I'm not sure you understand how tariffs actually work.
The manufacturer, broker, distributor and retailer all take a hit because the tariff blocks (or increases the cost to access the market). The consumer does too, to a lesser extent. As the costs increase and the sell price can't keep up due to elasticity of demand, efficient supply chains look for better options. Moving manufacturing to a lower tariffed country, changing sourcing or supply chain strategies, etc, are all on the table. But it takes time for these changes to happen.
The only way the US can tax a foreign company is if they have significant interests or operations in the US. But taxes are almost always passed on because they only apply to the finished good that's already stateside (not the entire supply chain), so if you really want to hose the consumer, hit Apple with a 125% tax. That would have a terrible impact on the economy. AND - you have to do it by company or category.
To make it as simple as possible:
Taxes apply to finished goods, so there's only one person to pay that price, the consumer. Apple is not going to reduce their MSRP due to a tax.
Tariffs block the access to a market, and therefore hit all levels of the supply chain, reducing the impact to the consumer but increasing incentives for companies to find alternative strategies.
I have worked in Product Management for two companies over the last 23 years - one imported 95% of what they sold and one is a domestic manufacturer that imports 30% of product sold.
Advantage being that American companies are largely the ones who offshored and the most likely to reshore. Also, the US govt has leverage over those companies. We just saw the limits of our leverage over China with Trump unilaterally reductions to tariffs and him rolling over and begging Xi to rub his belly in those Oval Office comments. Also by imposing a tax, you don’t have to negotiate trade deals with 85 different countries
I get that taxes require Congress and that’s probably why they went with tariffs.
We’ll see how the tariff negotiations shake out. My guess is we’ll be happy to return to the status quo.