April 8, 2025 (Retail Dive) –
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The escalating trade war between
“Dynamic shifts in consumption are already occurring across consumer groups and retail segments,” said
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
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,
“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
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
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
The tariffs therefore are arriving “on the back of an economy already slowing: The US consumer was already showing clear signs of fatigue,”
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