The Trump administration’s tariff scheme appears less and less likely to bring manufacturing jobs back to U.S. shores.

Businesses across the country are crunching the numbers and realizing that, despite Donald Trump’s insistence, they can’t balance out his tariff hikes across the supply chain.

“Some manufacturers who had plans to open factories in the country say the new duties are only adding to the significant obstacles they already faced,” Bloomberg reported Friday.

That’s because the supply chain to produce those goods in the United States simply isn’t there, requiring companies to import raw materials and factory equipment—which Trump’s tariffs have made unaffordable—from abroad.

  • perviouslyiner@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    21
    ·
    15 hours ago

    Gamers Nexus just talked to some PC manufacturers about this.

    “We assemble PCs, made in America from these parts”

    (motherboard, CPU, graphics card, PSU, …)

    So what if, for example, the motherboard manufacturer moved to the US?

    Well that’s an assembly of a hundred or so other Chinese components. And the equipment needed to manufacture it would need to be imported.

    Ok, but what if all those hundreds of factories were built in the US?

    Well, they all use imported aluminium and steel and plastic, etc., and require their own imported machines to produce…

    “Is any part of your PC entirely made in the US?”

    “The shipping labels? And maybe some packaging”