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U.S. Trade and Tariffs: A Long-Term Perspective - UW-Stevens Point | blog.uwsp.edu University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point Jan 8, 2025 8 facts
measurementBetween 1980 and 2000, United States real imports increased by $1,267.6 billion and real exports increased by $897.8 billion.
measurementIn 2023, total U.S. imports were $3.8 trillion and total U.S. exports were $3.1 trillion.
measurementBetween 1947 and 1980, United States real imports increased by $340.4 billion, while real exports increased by $289.3 billion.
measurementPrior to 1970, U.S. exports of goods and services as a percentage of GDP were approximately 5% or less.
measurementBetween 2000 and 2024, United States real imports increased by $1,886.8 billion and real exports increased by $1,290.9 billion.
measurementIn the third quarter of 2024, U.S. real imports reached a record annualized rate of $3.707 trillion, and U.S. real exports peaked at an annualized rate of $2.638 trillion.
measurementIn 2023, U.S. exports of goods and services represented 11.0% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), having exceeded 10% since 2005.
measurementIn 2023, U.S. imports of goods and services represented 13.9% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), having exceeded 12% since 1997 and peaking at 17.4% in 2008.
History of tariffs in the United States - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org Wikipedia 3 facts
claimThe United States Congress passed the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 to address the Great Depression, but the act worsened the economic situation as Canada, Britain, Germany, France, and other industrial nations retaliated with their own tariffs and bilateral trade deals, causing a decline in American imports and exports.
referenceThe 'Historical Statistics of the United States (Colonial Times to 1957)' provides comprehensive data on United States trade, including the value of exports and imports from 1790 to 1957, merchandise imports and duties from 1821 to 1957, and indexes of quantity and unit value of exports and imports from 1879 to 1957.
claimFrom a Keynesian perspective, the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act was counterproductive because the decline in United States exports exceeded the reduction in imports.
A tectonic shift in tariff policy | UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) unctad.org UNCTAD Sep 17, 2025 1 fact
claimMany trade deals between the US and other nations involve commitments for increased investment in the US or reductions in tariffs on US exports.
U.S. tariff outcomes dependent on trading partner responses dallasfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas May 13, 2025 1 fact
claimA 25-percentage-point tariff increase with retaliation causes uneven economic distribution across U.S. states, with states more reliant on exports experiencing declines of nearly 3 percent.
Trump Tariffs: Prices & Long-Term Economic Effects - Tax Foundation taxfoundation.org Tax Foundation Mar 18, 2025 1 fact
claimThe United States economy would experience a shift in manufacturing activity under higher tariffs, moving resources away from high-value exports like aircraft toward the production of lower-end goods like textiles.
Tariffs are a particularly bad way to raise revenue | Brookings brookings.edu Brookings Nov 4, 2025 1 fact
claimWhen a tariff-imposing country's exchange rate appreciates, it makes imports cheaper and partially offsets the tariff, but it simultaneously makes exports more expensive and reduces export volume.
The Impact of Trump's Tariffs: A Comprehensive Analysis claconnect.com CLA Feb 23, 2026 1 fact
claimCountries facing higher tariffs have reduced exports, which effectively lowers average tariff rates, according to CBS News.
World Trade Without the US | Cato Institute cato.org Cato Institute 1 fact
accountAs Chinese exports to the United States became more costly due to trade conflict, China began shipping more subsidized exports to other countries rather than increasing domestic consumption, causing those countries to bear the economic burden of the US-China trade conflict.
Tariffs: Estimating the Economic Impact of the 2025 Measures and ... richmondfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Apr 2, 2025 1 fact
quote"Tariffs remain an unknown that could have a large impact on our company due to both imports of our raw materials and exports of our finished product, not to mention the impact of demand on our industrial customers."
The Tariff Tug-of-War: A Look at Protectionism and Free Trade Over ... wita.org Washington International Trade Association Apr 29, 2025 1 fact
claimThe mercantilist approach used by European colonial empires attempted to create a favorable balance of trade by limiting imports and promoting exports.
Transatlantic Trade, the Trump Disruption and the World ... - ECPS populismstudies.org Kent Jones · European Center for Populism Studies Jan 20, 2026 1 fact
claimDonald Trump required US trading partners to submit individual concessions—such as greater market access for US exports, elimination of non-tariff barriers, and foreign investment in US manufacturing—to avoid unilateral tariffs and gain US import market access.