Defying Critics: Kevin Hassett Doubles Down—Trump’s Tariffs Aren’t Fueling Inflation
Economic advisor Kevin Hassett fires back at inflation hawks with a bold claim—Trump-era tariffs aren’t the boogeyman behind rising prices. As markets wobble and politicians point fingers, Hassett’s stance throws gasoline on the debate.
### The Tariff Tango: Scapegoat or Savior?
While mainstream economists blame tariffs for squeezing consumers, Hassett’s contrarian take cuts through the noise. No data, no charts—just a straight shot of economic defiance.
### Wall Street Rolls Its Eyes
Traders aren’t buying it. ‘Another advisor playing defense for legacy policies,’ scoffs one hedge fund manager—between sips of a $12 artisanal coffee, naturally.
Hassett’s argument lands as inflation stubbornly sticks around. Whether he’s right or just rewriting history, one thing’s clear: in finance, the narrative always costs more than the truth.
Kevin says consumers avoid imports as foreign countries absorb tariffs
In his remarks, Kevin doubled down on the argument that Trump’s policies have altered behavior to the point where imports are no longer as attractive. He said, “Demand for imports has gone way down, so much that even with what tariffs have been there… we’ve seen prices going down.”
That’s despite fears that the new tariffs WOULD drive up everyday costs. His theory is simple: people aren’t buying imports, so there’s less inflation pressure, even with duties in place.
He also claimed that countries the U.S. has trade deficits with are “eating the cost” of tariffs. That means places like Mexico, China, and Canada are not passing those extra costs onto American buyers, as some analysts had warned. Instead, they’re absorbing the economic hit.
Still, even the WHITE House admits prices could rise later this year as tariffs continue to stack up. So far, Kevin insists that patriotic consumer behavior is keeping those effects at bay.
But not everyone agrees. Ernest Tedeschi, an economist at Yale’s Budget Lab and a former chief economist at the White House Council of Economic Advisers under Joe Biden, criticized the White House’s math. Ernest wrote that the method used in the White House report “will understate tariff effects in their import indices.”
He also cited recent data from Harvard University’s Pricing Lab, showing that import prices have actually gone up since March, right when new tariffs on Mexico, Canada, and China began.
Another reason prices haven’t surged yet, according to some critics, is that importers stocked up in advance. By buying products early, before tariffs kicked in, they avoided immediate price increases.
That stockpiling bought time, but doesn’t cancel out the longer-term risk. And while TRUMP once unveiled major tariffs during what he called “liberation day” in April, many of those plans were temporarily shelved, further delaying the expected inflation impact.
Markets hold steady as Trump targets EU and Mexico with 30% tariffs
Despite all the noise, markets didn’t collapse. On Monday, Trump announced the U.S. will impose 30% tariffs on both the European Union and Mexico, starting August 1.
Leaders in both regions said they’d continue negotiations this month, hoping to bring the rate down before the deadline. Even with that threat looming, investors were calm.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average went up 28 points (0.1%), the S&P 500 ROSE 0.1%, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.4%. Traders seem to believe some of these tariffs may be negotiated away before they take full effect.
But the tension isn’t just international. Trump is also pressuring the Federal Reserve again. Over the weekend, Kevin told ABC News that Trump can fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell “if there’s cause.”
That came as Trump officials started reviewing renovation costs at the Fed’s Washington, D.C. building, raising eyebrows about whether the administration is digging for leverage against Powell.
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