From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Re: The Schumer Shutdown
Date: Sat, 4 Oct 2025 22:05:51 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.
On Sat, 04 Oct 2025 09:52:37 -0400, NoBody says...
> >The tariffs have also put the Federal Reserve in an exceedingly difficult spot, as Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged in a news
> >conference last week. Powell said the duties have raised the risk of both higher inflation and higher unemployment, two challenges
> >that rarely occur simultaneously. If unemployment rose, the Fed would typically cut rates to boost the economy, while if inflation
> >worsened, the central bank would usually raise rates or leave them elevated.
> >
>
> Don't forget the stock market is at record highs.
Ya... these nerds always latch onto ANYTHING that they THINK will make Trump look bad. In this case, they're conflating tariffs as
THE reason for job losses.
If business owners are faced with tariffs, they don't downsize, they raise prices, KNOWING that hardly anyone will pitch a fit
about the higher prices STAYING higher even after "things" settle down.
Grocery prices: down
Gas prices: down
Clothing prices: down
New Car prices: steady
Typical of hair-on-fire screaming liberals... they scream their distastes for Trump by pointing out something almost insignificant,
AND not giving EXACT reasons FOR these CATASTROPHES.
It's like their mantras now.
Trump is a racist! Can't give examples.
Trump is a Nazi! Can't give examples.
Trump is a fascist! Can't give examples.
=====
Inflation Cooled Again Last Month As Grocery And Gas Prices Fell, Few Signs Of Tariff Impact
Inflation cooled for the third straight month in April even after some of President Donald Trump's tariffs took effect, though
economists and many business owners expect inflation will climb in the coming months.
Grocery prices dipped 0.4%, pulled downward in part by a big 12.7% fall in the price of eggs. It was the BIGGEST DECLINE IN FOOD
COSTS AT HOME since September 2020, the government said.
The report suggests the TARIFFS HAVEN'T YET IMPACTED THE PRICES of many items. Clothing costs fell 0.2% from March to April, while
new car prices were unchanged.
Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices were also muted, rising 2.8% in April compared with a year ago, the
same as in March. On a monthly basis, they increased a mild 0.2%. Economists watch core prices because they typically provide a
better read on where prices are headed.
Only some early tariffs imposed by Trump were in effect in April, including 25% duties on steel and aluminum and 25% on some
imports from Canada and Mexico. Trump's initial 20% import taxes on goods from China were also in place. The steel and aluminum
duties will take time to affect consumer products, such as cars, and may not affect retail prices for months.
Trump announced a universal 10% tariff that took effect April 5. His huge 145% import taxes on Chinese goods were reduced to 30% in
a deal announced Monday.
Still, economists say average tariffs are now at about 18%, roughly six times higher than before Trump took office and the highest
in about 90 years.
Items that were already in transit when the tariffs were imposed won't have to pay the duties, while many companies have built a
stockpile of goods and could hold off on price hikes in hopes that tariffs will ultimately be reduced.
Still, some companies have raised prices and others have said they plan to do so as a result of the duties. Mattel Inc., the maker
of Barbie dolls and Hot Wheels cars, said earlier this month it would have to raise prices on some products to offset tariffs. The
company makes 40% of its products in China.
Tool maker Stanley Black and Decker said it raised prices in April and plans to do so again in the July-September quarter because
of higher tariffs. And executives at Procter and Gamble, the consumer products giant that makes household name brands such as Crest
toothpaste, Tide detergent, and Charmin toilet paper said last month it will likely have to pass on higher prices to consumers as
soon as July.
Consumer prices cooled noticeably in February and March, prompting Trump to claim repeatedly on social media that there is "NO
INFLATION." Inflation has fallen to nearly the 2% target set by the Federal Reserve, the agency charged with fighting higher
prices.
The smaller import taxes on Chinese goods will limit the damage to the U.S. economy, but combined with all the other tariffs,
economists forecast they will still slow growth this year and worsen inflation.
The Yale Budget Lab, for example, estimates the tariffs will lift prices 1.7% and cost the average household about $2,800 this
year.
And while Trump may tout his trade deals - such as the one with the United Kingdom reached last week - he has also said "tariffs is
the most beautiful word" in the dictionary, and is counting on revenue from duties to narrow the budget deficit, suggesting tariffs
will likely remain high.
The tariffs have also put the Federal Reserve in an exceedingly difficult spot, as Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged in a news
conference last week. Powell said the duties have raised the risk of both higher inflation and higher unemployment, two challenges
that rarely occur simultaneously. If unemployment rose, the Fed would typically cut rates to boost the economy, while if inflation
worsened, the central bank would usually raise rates or leave them elevated.