Panorama incierto para las empresas tras fallo sobre aranceles que impulsa contramedidas de Trump – Chicago Tribune


By MAE ANDERSON
NUEVA YORK (AP) — Businesses faced an uncertain new task after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Donald Trump’s promises under an emergency powers law, and the Republican president vowed to take action to sort out the fall to keep the serious going.
The Trump administration maintains that its aranceles help incentivize established manufacturers to reduce the trade deficit. But many companies in the country have decided to take price reductions and make other adjustments to compensate for the increase in costs caused by the aranceles.
This is how businesses and consumers will really get with the fall of the weather. Hours after the high court fell, Trump compromised by implementing a different law to impose a 10% arancel on all imports for 150 days while exploring other avenues to apply additional tariffs to countries he says are incurring in sales’ trade practices.
“Any boost to the economy from short-term spending cuts is likely to be partly thwarted by a prolonged period of uncertainty,” said Michael Pearce, an economist at Oxford Economics. “As it is likely that the government will rebuild the aranceles by other, harder means, the arancelaria general task could end up settling near current levels.”
Efforts to reclaim previously recovered aranceles — estimated to be worth $133,000 to $175,000 million — and now considered illegal, will be, if anything, complicated and likely favored by the largest and most resourced companies. Consumers hoping to receive compensation are unlikely to be reimbursed.
The fight against aranceles continues
Before Trump’s hardline posture on materials, many companies were bracing for years of legal battles.
Basic Fun, a Florida-based toy maker like Lincoln Logs and Tonka Trucks, last week filed a long list of companies with a request to recoup the money paid to the government.
Even the company’s chief executive, Jay Foreman, is concerned about any new Trump push, which doesn’t affect the toys. “I am concerned about a type of perpetual struggle for this, at least for the next three years,” he manifests.
The new 10% arancel announced by Viernes’ president was immediately planted by Daniel Posner, owner of Grapes The Wine Co., in White Plains, New York. As wine shipments are late for two weeks on an Atlantic cruise, they are expected if a load is planned for the moons to be affected.
“We are reacting before this has turned into a very unstable situation,” commented Posner.
Ron Kurnik is the owner of Superior Coffee Roasting Co. in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, across the Canadian border. For the better part of the past year, your coffee exports have been infringed, as well as the United States, the aranceles of the Canadian representation.
“It’s like a pesadilla of those who only want desperately,” said Kurnik, whose company has suffered prices at 6% on two occasions since the aranceles took effect. Even if you are happy with the fall of the Corte Suprema, you do not shout that it is a rampart.
Industries have more stability
A wide variety of industries, such as minor trade, technology and the agricultural sector, upheld the Supreme Court’s responsibility for recording Trump as having affected trade policy to his businesses.
The Business Roundtable, a corporate group that represents more than 200 established businesses, released a message about government action that further limits businesses’ access to business practices specific to their national security concerns.
In the minority sector, days of all types have adopted distinct forms to compensate for the effects of aranceles: by absorbing part of the costs, you must save expenses and diversify your consumption red. But also, I thought it was necessary to implement certain price increases at some point so that buyers would be particularly sensitive to inflationary pressures.
Dave French, vice president for government relations for the National Federation of Minorities, Mayor of the National Sector Trade Group, said he hoped the lower courts would ensure “a no-contract process” for serious reimbursement. The Fall of the Viernas did not address this question.
For the technology sector, Trump’s aranceles are causing great head quebraderos. Many of your products are manufactured overseas or rely on the importation of key components. The Computer and Communications Industry Association, which represents a group of technology companies working for more than 1.6 million people, was on standby thanks to the decision to reduce trade tensions.
“With this superada decision, we hope to be able to bring more stability to trade policy,” said Jonathan McHale, vice president of digital commerce at the group.
Farmers, who have suffered from the increase in the prices of equipment and fertilizers since the entry into force of the aranceles, and from a lower demand for their exports, are also pronounced.
“We strongly urge the president to avoid using any other available authority to import cost-increasing agricultural products,” said American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall.
Sectors that do not affect the fall
The Corte Suprema ordered, for its votes against three, that the Ley des Poderes Económicos de Emergencia Internacional does not grant the president the authority to engrave imports, a faculty that corresponds to Congress. But the decision only affects the low-cost areas, because some sectors do not see any food.
The decision to keep steel impuestos, upholstered furniture and kitchen and bathroom furniture in force, according to the Home Furnishings Association, which represents 15,000 furniture stores in North America.
At Revolution Brewing in Chicago, the aluminum used for lattes is such that ingredients contain charges Trump blamed on the metals, which were never affected by the high court ruling. “As much as the lattes are made in Chicago, the aluminum comes from Canada,” explained Josh Deth, social director of the brewery.
The aranceles also have an income that engages their business, which is also affected by the volatility of the price of beer and by the deacceleration of demand for craft beer.
“Todo suma”, apunto. “The beverage industry needs a breather. Aluminum prices are flattening.”
Reaction abroad
Italian wine growers, very affected by the aranceles, received the decision of the Corte Suprema with skepticism and advised that the fall could worsen the uncertainty in turning into trade with the United States.
The United States is the main market for wine made in Italy, and its sales have tripled in value over the past 20 years. The new companies of the European Union, which Casa Blanca had initially decided to retain 200%, had expressed the enthusiasm of the entire industry, which also maintained itself after reducing, deploying and negotiating at the bass.
“There is a more likely risk that aranceles are likely to be taxed through alternative legal channels, compounded by the uncertainty that this fall may generate in trade relations between Europe and the United States,” said Lamberto Frescobaldi, president of the UIV, a trade association that represents more than 800 winemakers.
In other parts of Europe, the initial reaction has resulted in renewed confusion over the costs incurred by companies exporting to the United States.
Trump’s statements could affect pharmaceuticals, chemicals and auto parts, according to Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING bank.
“Europe is not equivocal, this fall does not suppose a living person,” Brzeski said. “The legal authority may be different, but the economic impact may be the same to the people.”
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Periodicals of The Associated Press Anne D’Innocenzio in New York; Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit; Michael Liedtke in San Francisco; David McHugh in Frankfurt, Germany; Jonathan Matisse in Nashville, Tennessee; Adrián Sainz of Memphis, Tennessee, and Nicole Winfield of Rome contributed to this despacho.
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This story was translated into English by an AP editor with the help of a generative artificial intelligence tool.



