#46
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All this tariff talks, in laymans terms what would happen if everyone stopped using tariffs
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#47
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The End of the World
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#48
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#49
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I am 67, semi retired and spent a lot of money ($10K) on two new bikes the past few years. I am done buying bikes and expensive parts. From here on it will just be consumables like tires.
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#50
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Here's some real world feedback... I'm a fractional CRO for a $3M industrial manufacturing company. The expected tariff increases are putting a lot of uncertainty into our FY25 planning. Some of our components are made overseas, and bringing them onshore presents huge risk. Moving stainless steel molds from one supplier to another (to the US) represents both cost and risk of loss. Seems many molds are "broken" or lost by the original supplier, so new molds have to be created from scratch. For a small company, the choice may be to either bear the higher cost of tariffs or potentially shut down the business due to the challenges of moving some manufacturing onshore.
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Colnagi Mootsies Sampson HotTubes LiteSpeeds SpeshFat |
#51
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Free trade.
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#52
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Super simplistic example: US factory produces socks at a cost of $2/pair. Consumer price on the shelf is $2.50. Chinese factory produces similar socks at a cost of $1/pair. Consumer price on the shelf is $1.50. US factory workers demand a tariff of $1.25/pair to ensure they maintain their market share. Chinese socks now priced at $2.75. US company can now price their socks at $2.70, so they realize an extra $0.20 profit per pair. US sock factory workers protected, but the rest of the nation is paying $1.20 more per pair than they would be in a free/open market. And that's just a plain protectionist tariff. Many tariffs are retaliatory and cross industries (see the chicken tax I mentioned earlier). We all pay more for trucks today because some American farmer 50 years ago couldn't compete in the European chicken market. My position: There are ~2 cases where tariffs are valid... 1. The foreign competitor is ignoring international law or norms (environmental, labor, whatever) 2. Industry that is deemed vital to maintaining the security of the nation (thought this one is prone to all sorts of slippery slopes - Jones Act for domestic shipping/ship building is a related example) Tariffs should not be used for basic protectionism - if an industry can more cost effectively produce goods elsewhere, let them do so. Domestically, the "fix" is not to protect legacy industries but instead ensure a robust safety net and retraining (which we largely fail to do). Last edited by Alistair; Yesterday at 01:45 PM. |
#53
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Ronald Reagan, September 13, 1986 |
#54
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My gut tells me these proposed tariffs are purely retaliatory. |
#55
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Spending too much time thinking and worrying about what might happen is fruitless. I do know, that an individual who can't make money in a casino, doesn't know too much about how to handle money.
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"There is no perfectionism on the road to contentment." |
#56
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Quote:
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#57
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My thoughts exactly.
Bike related tariffs will have little effect on me as I’m a used bike and mostly old part guy. I think there will be plenty to distract from how much a new bike or set of wheels cost though. Last edited by Spaghetti Legs; Yesterday at 05:41 PM. |
#58
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And it turns out that as I talk with more people, more and more have family members in those situations. So much for the will of the people.
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Colnagi Mootsies Sampson HotTubes LiteSpeeds SpeshFat |
#59
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My protection from the, at this moment imaginary Tariffs on bike stuff, is the fact that I have 37 fully functionable road bikes in my house. Plus a very high quality Azor Dutch bike that should last for generations, and even a mountain bike. Plus about 1/2 a dozen full groupsets as spares, cabinets full of spare parts, etc, etc. Don't even get me started on spare wheelsets... At my age I doubt I even have 37 years left to ride. So that's easily more than one bike a year I could wear out and still be ok. |
#60
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fair enough, my apologies..
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Be the Reason Others Succeed |
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