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What to know about Trump's tariffs and their impact on businesses and shoppers

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 U.S. President Donald Trump's long-threatened tariffs are here, plunging the country into an escalating trade war with China, Canada and Mexico.
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Susano Cordoba, right, sells peanuts to truck drivers lining up to cross the border into the United States as tariffs against Mexico go into effect, Tuesday, March 4, 2025, in Tijuana, Mexico. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 U.S. President Donald Trump's plunging the country into an escalating trade war with China, Canada and Mexico.

Trump鈥檚 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico went into effect Tuesday, along with a heightened 20% levy on Chinese goods. In response, all three countries announced retaliatory measures.

Experts say consumers and businesses will be the hardest hit. Companies big and small will face higher costs on the goods they buy from other countries 鈥 and could have little recourse but to hike prices themselves. For consumers, that will likely mean more expensive price tags on everything from appliances and other big-ticket items to smaller,

How are Canada, Mexico and China responding?

Canada, Mexico and China all declared on Tuesday that they would impose retaliatory taxes on many U.S. products.

China is on a wide array of key U.S. farm exports, including American-grown chicken, pork, soy and beef. It also expanded the number of U.S. companies subject to export controls and other restrictions by about two dozen.

Meanwhile, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that his country would slap tariffs on more than $100 billion of American goods over the course of 21 days. And Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said her country on U.S. goods. Unlike Canada or China, however, she said she would not announce specific tariffs until Sunday 鈥 possibly indicating that Mexico still hopes to de-escalate the trade war.

鈥淎ll of the economies involved in the tariffs will see a loss in their real GDP (gross domestic product) and increasing consumer prices in general," said Wendong Zhang, an assistant professor of applied economics and policy at Cornell University.

Canada and Mexico will suffer considerably more than the U.S. because of the U.S. economy鈥檚 size and strengthening dollar, Zhang added. For the U.S., the combined tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico could result in about a 0.4% GDP loss, amounting to over $100 billion, he said.

The tariffs may be short-lived if the U.S. economy suffers. But Trump could also impose more tariffs on additional countries such as India or EU nations, and more products such as computer chips and pharmaceutical drugs. The president has injected a disorienting and unpredictable volatility into the world economy, leaving it off-balance as people wonder what he will do next.

What is the impact on US businesses?

Manufacturing companies and retailers for a wide array of goods will feel the impact.

鈥淚nternational trade is critically important to our business and industry," Best Buy CEO Corie Barry said on an earnings call Tuesday. 鈥淭he consumer electronics supply chain is highly global, technical and complex. China and Mexico remain the No. 1 and No. 2 sources for products we sell, respectively.鈥

At Target, sales and profits slipped during the crucial holiday quarter as customers held back on spending, and there will be 鈥渕eaningful pressure鈥 on the company's profits in early 2025 because of the tariffs and other costs, CEO Brian Cornell said at the company鈥檚 annual investor meeting Tuesday.

Car companies鈥 of the U.S., Canada and Mexico could be disrupted 鈥 in addition to auto parts that come from China.

What impact will the tariffs have

on consumers?

Tariffs on China could impact a variety of consumer products, including cellphones, children鈥檚 toys and clothing that Americans buy every day.

Some companies have been on consumers by stockpiling what they can or shifting manufacturing and suppliers back to the U.S. or other countries not impacted by the new levies.

Still, it鈥檚 easier to stock up on some goods than others. And even some 鈥渕ade-in-USA鈥 products plastics or packaging from China, for example. Wider supply chain shifts are also complicated and far from easy to carry out.

When it comes to consumer electronics, 鈥淲e expect our vendors across our entire assortment will pass along some level of tariff costs to retailers, making price increases for American consumers highly likely,鈥 Best Buy鈥檚 Barry said.

And with the U.S. spending billions on fruits and vegetables imported from Mexico and Canada each year, shoppers could face additional sticker shock in the grocery aisle. The new tariffs could also hike , mezcal, whiskey and made in those countries.

Tariffs add another 鈥渕ental calculus鈥 for consumers on top of other price pressures today 鈥 such as soaring egg prices due to avian flu, Zhang says. He adds that shoppers will need to watch prices for everyday items more closely.

When will customers see prices go up?

Exactly when consumers will see prices rise isn鈥檛 clear, but perishables will likely get hit first.

Especially during colder months, retailers rely on foreign imports for fresh fruit and vegetables, and long-term storage isn't an option. Shoppers could start seeing the prices of produce such as avocados, which come from Mexico, go up industrywide as early as in a few days, Target鈥檚 Cornell told reporters on Tuesday.

But he added that the extent to which prices will increase depends on how things play out over the next few weeks.

鈥淚 think things are unfolding so quickly,鈥 Cornell said. 鈥淲e will watch this carefully and understand, are these long-term tariffs? Is this a short-term action? How will this unfold over time? I think all of us are speculating, and I think we鈥檙e going to listen and learn and make sure that we can control the things we can control. But we don鈥檛 want to overreact right now to one day and one headline.鈥

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Associated Press writers Anne D'Innocenzio in New York and Paul Wiseman in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Wyatte Grantham-philips, The Associated Press

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