Americans are fed up with the price of food, and many are looking to President-elect Donald Trump to lower their grocery bills.
Summary
Americans, frustrated by high grocery prices, are looking to President-elect Trump for relief. Trump has pledged to lower food costs through tariffs on imports and by reducing energy prices, arguing that these measures would benefit U.S. farmers and consumers.
However, experts warn that tariffs could drive up prices by increasing costs for imported goods essential to food production and risk retaliatory tariffs on U.S. exports.
Economists also doubt Trump’s short-term impact on energy costs, noting that sustained grocery price drops are challenging without major economic shifts.
"you know I hate how he doesn't like minorities, lgbtq, ukraine, palestine, lebanon, created an insurrection, has sexual allegations, is a felon. But at least my groceries will be cheaper grin.png"
I bet a large chunk of the Trumpers thought like this
Anyone who understood what tariffs are could of told you this. Harris may not of had any economic plans other than ctax the 1%', but Trump's was demonstrably counter productive with tariffs
Tarrifs on food imports would be great for US farmers because they no longer have to compete with low priced imports, as the cost to import increases. You would induce a shortage at the current price point, resulting in less food avaliable and at a higher price.
Small point - farmers would probably still miss out as resellers and supermarkets take much of the marginal profit.
I think you might be looking at this wrong. Over 20% of agricultural products are exported in the US, less than 15% is imported. Food is a substitution commodity, if you can't buy one kind, you will buy another.
There is and will be no shortage of food in America. Food grown in central and south America? Maybe. This will just hurt all those farms exporting soy beans when the retaliation comes in to play.
Also deporting millions of farm workers isn't going to help prices stabilize when farmers have vegetables rotting on the vine because they can't afford US citizens and how much they expect to be paid to be a farm-hand and on top of that US citizens tend to be fat and fucking lazy in comparison to the immigrant laborers.
Further, in Washington state, many immigrants have made a livelihood by working their way up and buying the orchard out from the owner. How many of those immigrants will be denaturalized and now the orchard has no ownership and is up for grabs at pennies on the dollar, further consolidating food ownership.
If the US dollar is still somehow the world's reserve currency after all this fucking idiocy, I'll genuinely be shocked.
I'm also going to note that a ton of slaughterhouse workers are either undocumented or are the sorts of legal first-generation Latino immigrants Trump would still want to illegally deport. Even as a vegan who wants to see this industry die I can see how fucking disastrous that kind of shock would be for food prices. Even the change in public perception would be massive since it seems like the price of meat is one of the most significant barometers most meat-eaters use for how expensive groceries are.
If they deport them they lose both their bottom, most exploitable social group, and the hate/fear catalyst for their base... The idea is to take away all their rights and keep them subjugated.
Also deporting millions of farm workers isn't going to help prices stabilize when farmers have vegetables rotting on the vine because they can't afford US citizens and how much they expect to be paid to be a farm-hand and on top of that US citizens tend to be fat and fucking lazy in comparison to the immigrant laborers.
If the US dollar is still somehow the world's reserve currency after all this fucking idiocy, I'll genuinely be shocked.
If Trump's admin does crash the currency look for him to try and shift the US to his crypto grift coin which is I'm sure 100% legit and will not benefit from new regulation written around it being a black box of money laundering/bribe/slush fund.
Where do you get those numbers? I mostly ask because I think the new car and used car prices seem high. Also, the rent seems low, but obviously rent is extremely location dependant.
I was paying more six years ago for a run down 2 bed apartment outside of Seattle but still within the metro. That rent figure is more in line with my current mortgage payment, but I bought at what I thought was going to be a stupid time (interest is still higher than what I bought at).
Base model 2024 Crosstrek is 25k, and I could get about 8k for my 18yo car. I'm sure a dealership would sell it for the same that I paid 9 years ago, ~12k.
After gutting a dozen departments he might just take the savings and straight up subsidize food staples. Apparently people don't give two fucks about why just as long as stuff is cheap.