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Home Politics

Trump’s Economic Tariff Gamble: Manufacturing Miracle or Middle-Class Mirage

Sifatun Nur by Sifatun Nur
May 3, 2025
in Politics
Reading Time: 7 mins read
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The Tariff Trump Card

Donald J. Trump has once again pulled a fast one on the American economy not with a tweet this time, but with tariffs. Big ones. Bold ones. And like most of Trump’s stunts, this too comes with a shiny promise: “Bring back American manufacturing, slash the national debt, and grow the economy like it’s the 1980s again.” Sounds great, right?

Well, hold your patriotic applause because not everyone’s buying the miracle pitch.

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The GDP numbers are already raising eyebrows. The economy shrank last quarter. Shrinking not growing and that’s with a Republican at the helm talking big about jobs, industry, and “winning again.”

But don’t just take my word for it. Let’s unpack this economic fireworks display one spark at a time.


The Conservative Defender: Oren Cass Speaks

Oren Cass, economist and founder of the conservative think tank American Compass, thinks Trump is on to something.

He says, sure, the GDP dip looks scary, but don’t panic. It might just be a fluke, buried under a pile of accounting tricks and early purchases made before tariffs hit.

“There are all sorts of interesting nuances in how GDP gets calculated,” Cass told Amna Nawaz on PBS. “If you strip out the noise, it doesn’t really look like an abnormal quarter at all.”

Translation? Maybe the economy just tripped on the sidewalk nothing a band-aid and some confidence won’t fix.

But Cass admits the obvious: this isn’t just about numbers. It’s about how policy feels to the people. And right now, it feels like uncertainty is doing the tango with confusion. CEOs are nervous. Consumers are cautious. And no one knows what tomorrow’s price tag will look like.


Consumer Confidence: Flushed Down the Tariff Toilet

Let’s not sugarcoat it people are spooked.

Consumer confidence has now dropped for five straight months. That’s not a blip. That’s a nosedive.

Cass acknowledges that too, but insists Trump’s goal shaking the dust off America’s industrial base is noble. Necessary, even.

“What the administration is doing in challenging the failed system of globalization is exactly right,” he said.

Noble or not, you don’t bulldoze your house in winter just because it had a leaky faucet. The timing? Terrible. The communication? Worse.

Cass, to his credit, does throw a warning punch Trump’s way:

“An important part of good economic policy isn’t just the nuts and bolts. It’s how clearly you communicate what you’re trying to do.”

Right now, Trump’s tariff plan looks less like a blueprint and more like scribbles on a diner napkin.


Tariffs and the Middle-Class Wallet

Now, what about regular folks the ones without stock portfolios or country club memberships?

Cass tries to calm the waters by saying it’s not the Biden-era inflation all over again. He argues that since imports are a smaller piece of our spending pie, the average American won’t feel a massive hit. At worst, some China-made goods might cost more.

“It’s not the kind of inflationary situation that we saw previously,” Cass said. “If the policy’s done right, we can also see a lot more investment in making things in America.”

“If the policy’s done right…” and there’s the kicker. When has “if” ever been a comforting economic strategy?


The Other Side of the Coin: Jason Furman, the Sane Economist

Enter Jason Furman, former economic adviser to Obama and current Harvard brainiac. He’s not popping any champagne over Trump’s tariffs.

He calls it like it is: self-inflicted pain.

“We’re doing a supply shock to ourselves with the tariffs,” Furman warns. “And we’ve created a negative demand shock too.”

Let me translate that into English: We’re raising prices and killing confidence at the same time. That’s like trying to treat a cough with cyanide.

Furman fears we’re headed toward the economic Twilight Zone, where both inflation and unemployment rise together. Usually it’s one or the other. Trump might manage to achieve both a rare, and deeply unwanted, feat.


Long-Term Investment? Or Short-Term Chaos?

To be fair, Trump isn’t completely out to lunch on this one. The idea of rebuilding American manufacturing isn’t stupid. We’ve lost too many factories to overseas greed and cheap labor.

But here’s the catch: rebuilding takes time and predictability. Two things in short supply with this administration.

“Businesses don’t invest based on what the tariff is today,” Cass says. “They invest based on what the tariff is going to be in two years, three years, five years.”

But Trump’s economic policy changes faster than his stance on NATO. First he’s tough, then he’s soft, then he’s mad, then he’s golfing. You can’t plan a factory on that kind of mood swing.


The Chips Case: One Rare Bright Spot?

Cass does point to a rare win chip manufacturing.

With bipartisan support (yes, even Biden and McConnell managed to agree for once), the U.S. has managed to bring back some chip plants. Billions in investment. Real jobs. Concrete results.

Great.

But that wasn’t a Trump-only operation. That was a group project, and Trump can’t claim all the credit. In fact, it’s one of the few examples where clarity and planning led to success. Not exactly a Trump hallmark.


So Who Pays?

Let’s cut to the chase who foots the bill for all this economic chest-thumping?

You. Me. Everyone buying groceries or washing machines or school supplies. Because while Trump says China pays the tariffs, every economist worth their salt knows the truth:

“Tariffs are taxes. American consumers pay them,” Furman says. “Period.”

And when businesses get slammed by costs, they either raise prices or cut jobs. Guess which one they prefer?


Manufacturing Glory vs. Debt Fantasy

Let’s also talk about the national debt. Trump claims tariffs will help shrink it.

How? Through magic beans?

In reality, the U.S. debt under Trump ballooned. The guy added $7.8 trillion to it in four years, even before COVID truly kicked in. Check the numbers.

And now we’re supposed to believe tariffs which often reduce trade and slow economies will somehow pay off the country’s credit card?

Come on.


Final Verdict: A High-Risk, Low-Reward Gamble

Tariffs can work if they’re targeted, timed right, and rolled out with a clear long-term plan. But Trump’s approach looks more like a poker game at a gas station. Loud, chaotic, and not exactly built for the long haul.

This isn’t a revolution. It’s a reaction.

And while a few factories might hum back to life, they’ll be humming on the backs of middle-class families scraping by under higher prices, slower growth, and more economic chaos.

Punchline: “You can’t fix a broken system with a sledgehammer especially if you’re blindfolded and swinging for votes.”

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