How will Trump’s new furniture, pharmaceutical tariffs impact you?

How will Trump’s new furniture, pharmaceutical tariffs impact you?

How will Trump’s new furniture, pharmaceutical tariffs impact you?

President Donald Trump this week unveiled an array of new tariffs on consumer products such as upholstered furniture, kitchen cabinets and some pharmaceutical drugs.

The tariffs, set to go into effect on Oct. 1, range from 25% to 100%. They are set to hike the cost of imports as some levy-induced price hikes have already taken hold.

The fresh round of tariffs will likely raise prices paid by shoppers for some targeted goods and leave little immediate effect on others — all the while elevating uncertainty faced by businesses as they weather sudden changes in Trump’s policy, experts told ABC News.

Some U.S.-based companies in these industries will likely benefit from the policy, they added, since foreign competitors will face higher costs to reach the U.S. market.

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“This is a reminder that these tariff headlines can come out at any point in time and affect any segment of the market,” Dominic Pappalardo, chief multi-asset strategist at Morningstar Wealth, told ABC News. “That’s the uncertainty that markets and consumers are facing.”

In a series of social media posts late Thursday, Trump said he would impose tariffs on kitchen cabinets, furniture and heavy trucks for “National Security and other reasons.” Trump did not provide a reason for the pharmaceutical tariffs but they appeared intended to incentivize domestic production, since Trump offered an exemption for firms in the process of building U.S.-based factories.

Here’s what to know about the anticipated consumer impact of the new tariffs, according to experts:

In a social media post late Thursday, Trump proposed a 50% tariff on home goods such as kitchen cabinets and bathroom vanities, as well as a 30% tariff on upholstered furniture.

The policy is expected to hike prices for furniture, which have already climbed as a result of previous country-specific tariffs, Jason Miller, a professor of supply chain management at Michigan State University, told ABC News.

The inflation gauge preferred by the Federal Reserve — known as the personal consumption expenditure index — on Friday showed a 4.7% jump in furniture prices over the year ending in August, which marked a sharp acceleration from a 5.1% year–over-year drop in furniture prices at the same time last year.

“You’re certainly going to see more impact on furniture prices,” Miller said. “It’s going to be hard on the margins for the furniture wholesalers and retailers.”

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