cross-posted from: https://europe.pub/post/368959
Boy, it’d be a shame if someone created a browser extension or script that did the math…
It works out really well for Amazon because they can look like they tried to be the good guys while actually not doing anything.
it wasn’t a feasible plan.
it would be fairly easy for items that Amazon sells themselves and imports. for items made here out of some or all imported materials it gets much more complicated. for other sellers it would be too much to ask of them to figure out something that will get muddy real quick.
think about a can opener where the steel is Canadian, formed here, with grips made in china because they are the only ones doing that kind of plastic, and its all assembled here. the price is gonna go up, but how is Amazon or the mfr gonna list the tarrifs?
how about a made in the usa trump hat (yes there are some) but the fabric is from Bangladesh because we don’t make fabric anymore? how does that get tariff listed?
everyones usa col will be going way up. do you include any raises for your workers as a cost of the tariff? this ones a stretch I know.
Amazon is also international obv. so once that can opener ships to Canada, hows that get listed after that?
Thanks for replying. I don’t disagree with the complexity, but I do think it is feasible. Especially for a behemoth like amazon, with their ability to demand basically anything from the stores that rely on them and their access to some very talented engineers.
Seems pretty obvious that the White House doesn’t want the average consumer to know they are paying the tariffs
No, they didn’t. This is performative. It’s designed to get any company that would have listed tariff pricing to back off ahead of time.