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Tariffs shopping
list: What grocery prices will go up – or down
A farmer in Nebraska says he fears long-term
problems lie ahead amid trade disputes between the U.S. and other countries.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Tuesday announced a $12 billion plan to
pay farmers hurt by the trade battles.
When
consumers hear all the talk about tariffs, many may consider it an
inside-the-Beltway issue that won't reach their pocketbooks.
But increasingly, it looks like
the impact of tariffs will show up at U.S. supermarkets with price changes that
are both higher and lower, depending on the product.
With pressure on farmers and
producers mounting, everything from soda and beef
to grains and dairy is at risk for changes.
Experts say the basic price
threat is this: The cost of things you drink that come in cans will go
up due to their packaging. But prices for meat and some other farm
commodities could drop because farmers lost some of their overseas markets.
For now, farmers may hold off and stockpile
food that otherwise would be going to market, but they can't hang on
forever.
You can
stockpile for a while, but not indefinitely," said Phil Lempert,
founder of supermarketguru.com, a website tracking industry news and trends.
Even people who track prices as
carefully aren't sure of the extent to which consumers will feel the pinch.
Food companies sell to
retailers, so it's up to stores to decide whether they'll pass along the
increases or swallow them. Coca-Cola, in announcing price increases to grocers
because of tariffs last week, noted that it's not sure if retailers will pass
them on to consumers.
Some retailers have more
leverage than others. Giants such as Walmart, which got into a pricing dispute
with Campbell Soup over its expansive line of brands, have more leeway to
go back to hammer manufacturers, letting themselves and their shoppers off
the hook.
Here's what you need to know
about vulnerable industries:
Dairy
While the U.S. has caused woe
to its beer and soda industries with the aluminum tariff, which affects the
cost of cans, it is suffering at the hands of other countries that have imposed
tariffs on U.S. dairy products.
Mexico buys nearly a quarter of
all dairy products exported by the U.S., and the American dairy industry is
reeling from $387 million in Mexican tariffs of between 15 and 25 percent
on cheese.
To American customers, that
could mean a price drop of up to 5 percent initially and then as much as 10
percent, according to Burt Flickinger III, managing director of the Strategic
Resource Group, a New York-based retail and consumer goods consulting firm.
Beef, poultry and pork
Backlogs of meat will mean
lower prices – at least at first.
Grocery shoppers will see
prices down fall up to 5 percent initially, but it could max out at 12 percent,
Flickinger said.
"There's oversupply and
insufficient demand in the U.S. to consume the oversupply and contracting
export markets," he said.
Soft drinks
President Donald Trump’s 10
percent tariff on aluminum, which he signed in March, is forcing soda
manufacturers to raise their prices.
Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey
called the tariffs “disruptive” for the company and its retailers. “But I think
the conversations have been about how is this going to work for each and every
customer,” he said.
Coca-Cola has not disclosed the
specifics of these U.S. price increases, as they vary by retailer, a company
spokesman said.
Beer
Like the soda industry, beer
manufacturers also rely heavily on aluminum. About 60 percent of beer made and
sold in the U.S. comes in aluminum cans or bottles. According
to a March statement from the Beer Institute, brewers could be
saddled with $348 million in additional cost.
Some brewers have been forced
to react already. Sam Adams brewer Boston Beer said in an earnings call last
week that it would raise prices up by 2 percent in the second half of the year
due to the tariffs.
Mixed (grocery) bag
High-margin items – such
as breakfast cereals – will be able to withstand attacks on grain pricing,
but foods with multiple ingredients – such as frozen dinners, won't,
Lempert said.
Also risking higher prices are
fruits such as berries and avocados, he added. The U.S. grows some of the
domestic supply, but it's augmented by exported produce during the
U.S. offseason.
The U.S. hiked tariffs on Chinese imports Friday. Beijing
has said it would be forced to counterattack. China could put higher tariffs on
a number of U.S. goods including soybeans, whiskey [China does not consume much
US whiskey] and pork. China has
always had higher tariffs on our products.
The big lesson-we should never be dependent on CHINA for
ANYTHING and go back to our roots and become self sufficient, produce our own
goods and. China is our biggest threat, both economically and militarily as I’ve
frequently pointed out here – THEY ARE MORE OF A DANGER THAN RUSSIA AND YET
CONGRESS DITHERS AS USUAL.
Sen. M. Rubio [R.
Fl] came out and ripped his fellow politicians this week over their lack of
concern over China’s growing threat and mirrored what I’ve written about for
more than a year. China should be our
primary focus. They have taken the lead
in international affairs, Africa, the South China Sea, etc. and that should be
a major, major concern. Its premier has
essentially declared himself a dictator for life in his country without
opposition and not one eyebrow in the western press was raised.
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5 comments:
I'm with you-China has long enjoyed an unfair advantage over the US and it is time we struck back. We've gotten spoiled with cheap, underpriced [usually poorly made] goods and the likes of Apple have sold gullible Americans overpriced crap that they have gobbled up like crack. Some of us we'll squawk in the short run but China needs to be contained NOW before we're unable to do so.
Rubio must be reading your blog. I'm with you in that China is our biggest threat, not Russia. You always seem to accurately hit the nail on the head in your projections for so many geo-political thoughts...the White House should hire you. Then again, if I recall correctly, didn't you used to be an analyst for Naval intelligence?
I too have wondered why so much nonsense over the so-called Russia BS-my vote wasn't influenced and if anyone bothered to notice it is 100% driven by idiot Democrats. I have gone out of my way to avoid the purchase of Cheap crap made in China whenever possible though due to an excessive amount of goods brought in by retailers like Walmart, it is hard to do but this is a tonic our nation needs. Just like the main focus of this blog, this nation needs to refocus on becoming SELF RELIANT again wherever possible.
Mainstream news hasn't bothered to mention it but China has also been trying to topple the dollar as the dominant currency and replace it with a floating currency, gold or its yuan in international trade which would further undermine our international standing and would wound our currency...so WTF is wrong with our press? Too busy worrying about Pres. Trump's start in Hollywood [as opposed to that traitor Jane Fonda]? Trump is the first Prez to face the facts and do something about the situation.
China’s exports to the United States rose by double digits in July, shrugging off President Donald Trump’s tariff hikes in a fight over technology policy.
Sales to China’s biggest export market defied forecasts they might slump after merchants rushed to fill orders before Washington imposed trade penalties July 6, customs data showed Wednesday.
Exports to the United States rose 13.3 percent over a year earlier to $41.5 billion. That was off slightly from June’s 13.6 percent rate but still stronger than China’s global export growth.
“Today’s trade data don’t show any significant impact from the first round of U.S. tariffs,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics in a report.
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