logo
Tariffs are the latest test of beleaguered US consumers

Tariffs are the latest test of beleaguered US consumers

Miami Herald09-04-2025
The escalating trade war between the United States and more than 180 other nations may be trying consumers' last nerve.
"Dynamic shifts in consumption are already occurring across consumer groups and retail segments," Marshal Cohen, Circana's chief retail industry adviser, said in a statement. "The consumer is in a state of confusion and trying to decipher how to prioritize their purchases in an environment of significant change."
A number of countries have retaliated against a slew of new tariffs from the Trump administration with tariffs of their own, which threatens to raise prices on a range of goods, including apparel and footwear, electronics, furniture and food. But several forces, and not just tariffs, are fueling the uncertainty bedeviling the U.S. consumer, according to a Monday report from Circana. High prices, rising debt, concerns among Hispanic consumers about the immigration crackdown, extreme weather and natural disasters are all upending spending patterns, Circana said.
Inflation, which has already strained household budgets, is set to get another push upward, since the point of the levies is to raise prices and make certain goods less affordable, Wells Fargo economists led by Tim Quinlan said in a Friday research note. The 20-point tariff rate bump announced April 2 will drive the personal consumption inflation rate 1.8 percentage points beyond the baseline forecast, and the effect is even larger for core inflation, according to their model.
"At the heart of tariffs lies an effort to increase prices to achieve various policy objectives (e.g., greater domestic production, negotiating leverage, tax revenues)," Quinlan said. "The tariffs announced on April 2 are set to do that in spades."
This could further sap consumer spending power and/or business profits, and undermine investments and hiring, they said.
"Assuming tariffs rise by the full amount proposed and stay in place through 2026, real GDP growth would effectively stall in Q2 before turning negative in the third quarter, highlighting the heightened risk of recession," Quinlan said.
Last week the National Retail Federation warned of lower GDP growth and "a slower trajectory for consumer spending," largely due to the uncertainty around tariffs and their effects. The group expects retail sales this year to grow between 2.7% and 3.7%, reaching $5.4 trillion to $5.5 trillion. Some of those forces, like weather events, are regional, or, in the case of Hispanic consumers, specific to certain groups. For the first time in two years, Hispanic consumer demand is underperforming non-Hispanic consumers, Circana said, a phenomenon already noticed by off-price retailers.
In general, since 2020, as prices on essentials rose while wage growth lagged, the effect on demand for discretionary goods has been "noticeable," Circana said. In 2023, for example, general merchandise reached a peak average price increase of 25% over 2019 levels, pushing demand down as much as 9%. In Q4, the average price increase of goods sold was up 17% and unit demand was down 7%. This shift also included a consumer shift toward value options like private label and off-price.
Earnings guidance for the year has largely failed to account for slack in the U.S. economy from the Trump administration's downsizing of the federal government and the immigration crackdown, according to a research note from UBS Global Research analysts led by Bhanu Baweja, who call immigration and the fiscal impulse "two big supports to growth" in the last three to four years.
The tariffs therefore are arriving "on the back of an economy already slowing: The US consumer was already showing clear signs of fatigue," UBS said.
Copyright 2025 Industry Dive. All rights reserved.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

D.C. Families Brace For Start of School Under Trump Takeover
D.C. Families Brace For Start of School Under Trump Takeover

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

D.C. Families Brace For Start of School Under Trump Takeover

Members of the National Guard from multiple states patrol a Metro transit station in Washington D.C. on orders from Pres. Donald Trump, on Aug. 20, 2025. Credit - Dominic Gwinn—Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images On a recent summer night, a 9-year-old girl in Northwest Washington, D.C. was having trouble sleeping. She heard on the news that speaking Spanish could draw the attention of federal agents, and she worried aloud to her Hispanic father that immigration officers might come for her classmates' parents. 'She kept asking, 'Can they come to people's homes? Can they come to our home?'' her father said. 'She was terrified.' Their family, longtime residents of the city and American citizens, are not at risk of deportation. But the girl's anxiety reflects a broader unease rippling through D.C. families as the city's public schools prepare to start a new school year on Monday, Aug. 25, under the shadow of President Donald Trump's takeover of the city's police force and a ramp up in federal immigration enforcement. Across the nation's capital, parents are setting up group chats on WhatsApp and Signal to coordinate carpools and walking groups. Some are pressing the city to relax attendance requirements, out of concern that some families might feel they have to keep their kids at home. 'We've got people volunteering to carpool other people's kids to school because the parents are afraid to try to get their kid to school on their own,' says Catherine Morgan, a D.C. resident whose child starts third grade on Monday. Since announcing in August that he would place the Metropolitan Police Department under federal control and deploy National Guard troops to patrol the streets, Trump has insisted his measures are necessary to curb what he has described as 'roving mobs of wild youth' and 'bloodthirsty criminals,' despite statistics showing violent crime in the city had hit a 30-year low earlier this year. His administration has also rolled back protections that once limited immigration enforcement around schools, allowing agents to conduct raids in neighborhoods and workplaces. The result, according to parents, educators and community leaders, is a climate of fear and confusion at the very moment when families are usually focused on first-day jitters, backpacks, and back-to-school clothes. Parents across the city interviewed for this story described adjusting their routines to shield their children from encounters with federal law enforcement whose mandate remains unclear. Marta Urquilla, a D.C. resident and mother of two teenagers, says she will not let her kids ride public buses to school. 'At this point, that's off the table,' she says. 'My kids present as Black, and that's just not something I am inclined to expose them to.' She says families in her neighborhood near Howard University have organized walking groups to the grocery store and that similar plans would be in place for school commutes. The federal occupation, Urquilla adds, has not been evenly felt across the city. 'The closer you get to where immigrants live, to where Black folks live and work, the more you see it,' she says. Rumors of ICE enforcement actions have swirled since Trump's inauguration in January, but have intensified over the past two weeks as ICE, FBI, Border Patrol, National Guard troops, and more have descended on D.C. streets. Videos have circulated of federal agents and local police arresting individuals in handcuffs and stopping others at various checkpoints. Across the country, school districts have been taking precautions to shield children from immigration enforcement. In New York, officials unanimously passed a resolution this year that prohibits ICE agents from entering schools or accessing student records without a judicial warrant. In Los Angeles, school leaders announced new 'safe zones' in areas targeted by ICE to protect students before and after school. D.C. parents, however, remain uncertain how much protection their schools can offer, given the city's lack of statehood and Trump's direct authority over its institutions. At a virtual information session for parents on Wednesday night, D.C. Public Schools officials attempted to address concerns about the increased law enforcement presence in the city, noting that they expect very little impact to schools. "Any law enforcement action on school grounds can only take place with a valid warrant or court order,' said Dr. Lewis D. Ferebee, the chancellor for District of Columbia Public Schools. He stressed that school resource officers are not performing any duties related to immigration or custom enforcement. DCPS also shared a few 'best practices' for parents to share with students, including to always travel in a group or with trusted adults, and to avoid distractions while traveling, such as being on a phone or using headphones. 'Please advise our young people to stay aware of their surroundings,' Ferebee said at the information session. D.C. police are currently enforcing a citywide juvenile curfew that begins at 11 p.m. for people under 17. In some targeted neighborhoods, juvenile curfews begin as early as 8 p.m. But some parents remain frustrated by the lack of communication from their schools about what many view as an unprecedented moment. 'We haven't been told a goddamn thing,' says Morgan when asked what her daughter's school in D.C. had communicated about the coming week. 'It makes us feel like, what are you going to do? Are you just going to let them come in and take these kids?' Jenn Kauffman is a mother of two who sits on the city's advisory neighborhood commission representing her neighborhood in Brightwood Park. She says parents are demanding stronger assurances from school leaders. 'I want bare minimum for the schools to kind of stand up and say what they will do to protect students,' she said. 'But in this climate, and you know, D.C. being a federal jurisdiction, I'm also afraid that still won't be enough.' Her 7-year-old, who attends a bilingual school, has already been discussing the situation with classmates. 'The kids have been talking about this and aware about this,' she says. 'But I think it's risen to a new level.' Parents say their children are absorbing the stress—and so are they. Lara Fife, whose 4-year-old started pre-K this month, says he has asked her why police are detaining people. 'I've been extremely stressed and not sleeping well at all,' she says. The White House insists the deployments are making Washington, D.C. safer, but most residents don't see it that way. A Washington Post-Schar School poll published Wednesday found roughly 80% of D.C. residents opposed Trump's executive order to federalize the city's police department, and 65% do not think Trump's actions will make the city safer. Residents warn that the show of force may deepen mistrust and drive children away from school. In Los Angeles, officials recently reported a 7% rise in online academy enrollment, attributing the spike in part to immigration fears. D.C. parents worry they may soon face the same difficult choice. 'Are we at a point where we need a virtual schooling option?' Kauffman asks. 'Because what's going to happen then is families are going to have to choose between risking their child, or being referred to Child Protective Services for truancy. And that's just immoral.' For now, families are bracing for Monday. Some will walk in groups. Others will drive in carpools. Still others may keep their children home. But the sense of unease remains. The Hispanic father with the worried 9-year-old daughter says his family plans to arrive at school extra early on Monday so he can warn other families if they notice ICE or other federal law enforcement in the area. 'I'm not hearing from any person of color or minorities that they feel safer or that they think that the police presence is here to quote, unquote, restore safety or security, right? It's quite the opposite,' he says. Write to Nik Popli at Play Farm Merge Valley

D.C. Families Brace For Start of School Under Trump Takeover
D.C. Families Brace For Start of School Under Trump Takeover

Time​ Magazine

time2 hours ago

  • Time​ Magazine

D.C. Families Brace For Start of School Under Trump Takeover

On a recent summer night, a 9-year-old girl in Northwest Washington, D.C. was having trouble sleeping. She heard on the news that speaking Spanish could draw the attention of federal agents, and she worried aloud to her Hispanic father that immigration officers might come for her classmates' parents. 'She kept asking, 'Can they come to people's homes? Can they come to our home?'' her father said. 'She was terrified.' Their family, longtime residents of the city and American citizens, are not at risk of deportation. But the girl's anxiety reflects a broader unease rippling through D.C. families as the city's public schools prepare to start a new school year on Monday, Aug. 25, under the shadow of President Donald Trump's takeover of the city's police force and a ramp up in federal immigration enforcement. Across the nation's capital, parents are setting up group chats on WhatsApp and Signal to coordinate carpools and walking groups. Some are pressing the city to relax attendance requirements, out of concern that some families might feel they have to keep their kids at home. 'We've got people volunteering to carpool other people's kids to school because the parents are afraid to try to get their kid to school on their own,' says Catherine Morgan, a D.C. resident whose child starts third grade on Monday. Since announcing in August that he would place the Metropolitan Police Department under federal control and deploy National Guard troops to patrol the streets, Trump has insisted his measures are necessary to curb what he has described as 'roving mobs of wild youth' and 'bloodthirsty criminals,' despite statistics showing violent crime in the city had hit a 30-year low earlier this year. His administration has also rolled back protections that once limited immigration enforcement around schools, allowing agents to conduct raids in neighborhoods and workplaces. The result, according to parents, educators and community leaders, is a climate of fear and confusion at the very moment when families are usually focused on first-day jitters, backpacks, and back-to-school clothes. Parents across the city interviewed for this story described adjusting their routines to shield their children from encounters with federal law enforcement whose mandate remains unclear. Marta Urquilla, a D.C. resident and mother of two teenagers, says she will not let her kids ride public buses to school. 'At this point, that's off the table,' she says. 'My kids present as Black, and that's just not something I am inclined to expose them to.' She says families in her neighborhood near Howard University have organized walking groups to the grocery store and that similar plans would be in place for school commutes. The federal occupation, Urquilla adds, has not been evenly felt across the city. 'The closer you get to where immigrants live, to where Black folks live and work, the more you see it,' she says. Rumors of ICE enforcement actions have swirled since Trump's inauguration in January, but have intensified over the past two weeks as ICE, FBI, Border Patrol, National Guard troops, and more have descended on D.C. streets. Videos have circulated of federal agents and local police arresting individuals in handcuffs and stopping others at various checkpoints. Across the country, school districts have been taking precautions to shield children from immigration enforcement. In New York, officials unanimously passed a resolution this year that prohibits ICE agents from entering schools or accessing student records without a judicial warrant. In Los Angeles, school leaders announced new 'safe zones' in areas targeted by ICE to protect students before and after school. D.C. parents, however, remain uncertain how much protection their schools can offer, given the city's lack of statehood and Trump's direct authority over its institutions. At a virtual information session for parents on Wednesday night, D.C. Public Schools officials attempted to address concerns about the increased law enforcement presence in the city, noting that they expect very little impact to schools. "Any law enforcement action on school grounds can only take place with a valid warrant or court order,' said Dr. Lewis D. Ferebee, the chancellor for District of Columbia Public Schools. He stressed that school resource officers are not performing any duties related to immigration or custom enforcement. DCPS also shared a few 'best practices' for parents to share with students, including to always travel in a group or with trusted adults, and to avoid distractions while traveling, such as being on a phone or using headphones. 'Please advise our young people to stay aware of their surroundings,' Ferebee said at the information session. D.C. police are currently enforcing a citywide juvenile curfew that begins at 11 p.m. for people under 17. In some targeted neighborhoods, juvenile curfews begin as early as 8 p.m. But some parents remain frustrated by the lack of communication from their schools about what many view as an unprecedented moment. 'We haven't been told a goddamn thing,' says Morgan when asked what her daughter's school in D.C. had communicated about the coming week. 'It makes us feel like, what are you going to do? Are you just going to let them come in and take these kids?' Jenn Kauffman is a mother of two who sits on the city's advisory neighborhood commission representing her neighborhood in Brightwood Park. She says parents are demanding stronger assurances from school leaders. 'I want bare minimum for the schools to kind of stand up and say what they will do to protect students,' she said. 'But in this climate, and you know, D.C. being a federal jurisdiction, I'm also afraid that still won't be enough.' Her 7-year-old, who attends a bilingual school, has already been discussing the situation with classmates. 'The kids have been talking about this and aware about this,' she says. 'But I think it's risen to a new level.' Parents say their children are absorbing the stress—and so are they. Lara Fife, whose 4-year-old started pre-K this month, says he has asked her why police are detaining people. 'I've been extremely stressed and not sleeping well at all,' she says. The White House insists the deployments are making Washington, D.C. safer, but most residents don't see it that way. A Washington Post-Schar School poll published Wednesday found roughly 80% of D.C. residents opposed Trump's executive order to federalize the city's police department, and 65% do not think Trump's actions will make the city safer. Residents warn that the show of force may deepen mistrust and drive children away from school. In Los Angeles, officials recently reported a 7% rise in online academy enrollment, attributing the spike in part to immigration fears. D.C. parents worry they may soon face the same difficult choice. 'Are we at a point where we need a virtual schooling option?' Kauffman asks. 'Because what's going to happen then is families are going to have to choose between risking their child, or being referred to Child Protective Services for truancy. And that's just immoral.' For now, families are bracing for Monday. Some will walk in groups. Others will drive in carpools. Still others may keep their children home. But the sense of unease remains. The Hispanic father with the worried 9-year-old daughter says his family plans to arrive at school extra early on Monday so he can warn other families if they notice ICE or other federal law enforcement in the area. 'I'm not hearing from any person of color or minorities that they feel safer or that they think that the police presence is here to quote, unquote, restore safety or security, right? It's quite the opposite,' he says.

Man living next to Hispanic-owned business puts up sign urging Trump to deport his neighbors
Man living next to Hispanic-owned business puts up sign urging Trump to deport his neighbors

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Man living next to Hispanic-owned business puts up sign urging Trump to deport his neighbors

A North Carolina man who says he's upset about the business next door to his home has put up a sign in his yard asking President Donald Trump to deport people in his neighborhood. 'BUILD THE WALL/DEPORT THEM ALL/TRUMP START WITH MY NEIGHBORHOOD FIRST' reads the sign that Douglas Dietrich placed at his home in Grifton, Pitt County. The news was first reported by WITN. Dietrich lives next door to the automotive, aircraft and boat repair business Monkeys Garage, owned by Enrique Garfias. According to WITN, Garfias told them that he was a 'legal citizen of the United States' and that he found the sign offensive, since it was targeted at him. Garfias said he thinks there is racism behind Dietrich's sign. He added that Dietrich has problems 'not just with Hispanic people' but that he targets Hispanic people more, because 'he thinks he can do it to us.' 'There is so much hate already. I don't hate him,' Garfias said. 'He thinks he's right. People out there are gonna see what he's doing is not right.' Calls to Garfias' business and other phone numbers were not answered. A call by NBC News on Thursday to a number believed to belong to Dietrich disconnected before anyone spoke. When called again, the person who responded said 'Stop f---ing calling me' and hung up. Dietrich told WITN that part of the reason he was upset was because Monkeys Garage was able to operate in a residential neighborhood. He said that years ago he wanted to operate a business on the property where Monkeys Garage is, but was told by previous town officials he couldn't do so because it's in a residential neighborhood. The dispute has led to conflicting comments on social media as community members have weighed in. Dietrich said the social media attention leads him to want to keep the sign in place. There were questions raised over whether Dietrich's sign was in compliance with local regulations in Grifton and its extraterritorial jurisdiction, which is where Dietrich lives. 'Everyone has the right to freedom of speech,' Dylan Haman, town manager of Grifton, told NBC News. 'Whether anyone agrees with what the sign says or not that's up to the public and whether or not they think it's a neighborly thing to do is another question.' While the town of less than 3,000 has to respect Dietrich's right to freedom of speech, the town does have zoning rules about permit requirements, where signs can be located, their size and height, etc., Haman said. 'He can say anything from, 'I love Jesus' to political. We don't get into that because that's a First Amendment issue,' he said. A permit application for the sign was submitted Wednesday, Haman said. A determination on whether the sign complies with the local sign ordinance might come at the end of the week, the town manager said, adding that and 'there are some regulations about what's allowed in residential districts' that have to be considered too. Haman said there had not been considerations yet on whether the sign could lead to people targeting Garfias and his business or some kind of violence. 'We are not pro or against any political party ... We are just a town trying to provide service,' Haman said, who noted that the town board is elected in unaffiliated elections. 'We just encourage everybody to be more neighborly.' This article was originally published on Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store