In the highly complex and interwoven arena of international commerce, Team Trump has somehow managed to declare victory after setting the economic house on fire. The White House recently announced tariff rollbacks with great fanfare, hailing their negotiating prowess after plunging global markets into chaos.
This represents a bewildering pattern we’ve witnessed repeatedly: create an unnecessary crisis, partially resolve the problem you manufactured, then claim heroic achievement. It’s akin to a firefighter seeking praise for extinguishing a fire they deliberately set.
Team Trump's reckless trade strategy has caused real economic damage. Global supply chains—complex networks built over decades—are now disrupted. American companies find themselves paralyzed with uncertainty. International markets have experienced significant downturns. Our closest allies feel betrayed. Retaliatory tariffs against American goods continue to harm US exporters.
Despite pulling back from some of their most extreme positions, Team Trump celebrates as though they have engineered a masterful victory. This selective perception ignores the lasting harm inflicted on American businesses, consumers, and our global standing.
Consider the United States’ current position: America now maintains a staggering 24 percent average tariff rate, higher than any other nation on Earth. As former Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Jason Furman points out, we’ve surpassed even nations like Iran and Venezuela, which maintain rates of 12 and 14 percent, respectively. No country with a population above one million and per capita income even a quarter as high as America’s imposes average tariff rates above 10 percent.
The economic consequences reach everyday Americans in ways many fail to recognize. Brett Schulman, CEO of Cava, the Mediterranean restaurant chain, faces rising costs across his entire operation. Pulp-based paper bowls from Canada, olive oil, and Kalamata olives from Greece are now subject to tariffs. Even construction costs for new locations will likely increase. Schulman aptly describes it in the Wall Street Journal: “It’s like going to a restaurant where the menu keeps changing before you order. No one feels confident making a decision.”
This uncertainty reverberates throughout our economy.
When import taxes hit essential products, businesses must either absorb those costs—reducing profits and limiting growth—or pass them on to consumers. Your Mediterranean lunch bowl grows more expensive not because of market forces but because of deliberately imposed government policies.
Financial Times columnist Gideon Rachman describes the administration’s “mob boss” tactics toward global markets. Trump's White House goons initiated trade conflicts with virtually every major trading partner simultaneously while taking “an axe to the supply chains of many of the world’s leading multinationals.” No coherent strategy guides these actions—neither foreign policy realism nor trade mercantilism can explain such self-defeating behavior.
Perhaps most shocking, these economically destructive policies won’t achieve their stated goals. Trade deficits—Team Trump’s supposed concern—will remain essentially unchanged. Instead, the leadership of the United States made the entire global economy poorer, including ourselves.
The celebration over partial tariff rollbacks exemplifies a disturbing pattern from Team Trumo: create chaos, allow substantial damage, partially reverse course, and then declare victory. This approach only succeeds politically when constituents fail to connect deteriorating economic conditions with the policies causing them.
Americans deserve trade policies crafted with strategic foresight, economic literacy, and diplomatic skill—not impulsive decisions that harm our prosperity and standing in the world. Our current approach resembles a child knocking over a Monopoly board, slamming his feet, scattering a few pieces back onto it, then claiming championship status. The economic security of millions demands better than theatrical negotiations that leave us all worse off.
Enjoy the ride + Plan accordingly.
-Marc