US Consumers, Importers Take Biggest Hit From Tariffs, ECB Study Finds
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 30, 2026
2 min readLast updated: March 30, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 30, 2026
2 min readLast updated: March 30, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleThe ECB finds that U.S. consumers and importers bear the bulk of tariff costs, with exporters only absorbing a small share. Tariffs also significantly depress import volumes, inflicting a negative shock on exporters.
FRANKFURT, March 30 (Reuters) - U.S. consumers and importers take the vast majority of the financial hit from tariffs but trade volumes also suffer, resulting in a negative shock for exporters, too, a European Central Bank Economic Bulletin article said on Monday.
The U.S. imposed a raft of tariffs on most trading partners last year and economists have been debating who would take the biggest hit after the Trump administration predicted that exporters would pay the cost.
"Exporters to the United States are absorbing only a small fraction of higher tariff-related costs," the ECB's study said. "Their costs are falling mostly on domestic importers and consumers."
The U.S. consumer now pays about a third of the cost and over the longer term, this share could rise to over half as U.S. firms exhaust their ability to absorb costs, the ECB said.
This implies that U.S. firms would absorb around 40% of higher tariff costs in the longer term, the article added.
But European exporters are not immune either as the estimated impact of tariffs on import volumes is large, the ECB predicted.
The paper said in the case of product categories that are still traded under tariffs, a 10% increase in the duties would result in a 4.3% decline in import volumes.
(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Jamie Freed)
US consumers and importers bear the majority of the financial impact from tariffs, rather than foreign exporters.
In the long term, the share of tariff costs paid by US consumers could exceed half as firms reach their capacity to absorb costs.
A 10% increase in tariffs is estimated to lead to a 4.3% decline in import volumes, according to the ECB study.
Yes, while the primary burden is on US consumers and importers, exporters are also negatively affected by reduced trade volumes.
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