President Trump is planning to impose tariffs Feb. 1 on most U.S. imports, including a hefty 25% tariff on products from Canada and Mexico.
President Trump is planning to impose tariffs Feb. 1 on most U.S. imports, including a hefty 25% tariff on products from Canada and Mexico.
chuyu2014/Envato

If Trump Tariff Plan Goes Through, Rhode Island Businesses and Residents Will Foot the Bill

President Trump is planning to impose tariffs Feb. 1 on most U.S. imports, including a hefty 25% tariff on products from Canada and Mexico

President Trump is planning to impose tariffs Feb. 1 on most U.S. imports, including a hefty 25% tariff on products from Canada and Mexico

Share
President Trump is planning to impose tariffs Feb. 1 on most U.S. imports, including a hefty 25% tariff on products from Canada and Mexico.
President Trump is planning to impose tariffs Feb. 1 on most U.S. imports, including a hefty 25% tariff on products from Canada and Mexico.
chuyu2014/Envato
If Trump Tariff Plan Goes Through, Rhode Island Businesses and Residents Will Foot the Bill
Copy

Following his election, President Donald Trump announced plans to impose tariffs on most U.S. imports, including a 25% tariff on products from Canada and Mexico. If the administration makes good on that threat, it would upend decades of North American Free Trade.

Morning host Luis Hernandez spoke about the implications of Trump’s plan with Nina Eichacker, Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Rhode Island.

Interview highlights

What is an import tariff?

Nina Eichacker: An import tariff is a tax assessed by a government on goods that are imported from other countries. The way that they work is that typically, a domestic import broker that works for businesses domestic to a given economy basically pays the customs when those goods are supposed to enter the country.

Typically, it’s not the foreign company that is exporting the good that pays it, but rather the import broker that works for a domestic importer, whether that’s Walmart or Costco or whoever. So tariffs are taxes that are assessed on different goods from different countries, and they can be implemented for any number of reasons.

On the impact the tariffs would have on Rhode Island residents

Eichacker: As those goods go through customs, the firm that is importing the goods – like, for example, Walmart – will subsequently pass that extra cost onto consumers. So domestic consumers are, by and large, the actors who pay the tariffs in practice.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Museum curator Melaine Ferdinand-King says the museum will highlight the cultural and historical contributions of Black Rhode Islanders
Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee lauded the bystanders who stopped a mass shooting in Pawtucket and called the team ‘an inspiration for all Rhode Islanders’
A Providence chef and cocktail bar move into the final round of the 2026 James Beard Awards
Without stoves or modern tools, participants learned to prep a full 18th-century meal over an open flame in a historic Rhode Island home
In Los Angeles, a new crop of curbside libraries are helping communities recover after last year’s wildfires. But instead of books, these libraries are full of seeds
The fires will return from May through November, featuring a milestone 500th lighting and themed nights