Economy
Related: About this forumPrices are now starting to rise because of tariffs. Economists say this is just the beginning
Alicia Wallace, CNN
Thu, July 10, 2025 at 5:30 AM EDT
6 min read

Some goods prices have been marching higher in recent weeks. Economists expect that to broaden and worsen. Joe Raedle/Getty Images
(CNN) Economists, researchers and analysts have warned that President Donald Trumps sweeping trade policy of tacking steep tariffs on most goods that come into America will deliver a taxing blow to consumers via higher prices.
However, recent months economic data has shown that overall inflation has remained fairly tame.
Trump and members of his administration tout the positive economic reports as signs that tariffs are working. However, the chorus of concern is growing: Prices are moving higher, and economists say this is just the beginning.
Heres a look at the mechanisms behind why price hikes, and hotter inflation, are a slow burn:
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TheFarseer
(9,606 posts)Honestly Im not sure what their plan is when this goes bad. What can they credibly blame so more than just their cult believes it?
bucolic_frolic
(51,514 posts)Companies now begin passing along the increases. We are so so screwed. Food is already up. Cocoa. Olive Oil. Fish. Butter. Ouch!
sheshe2
(92,929 posts)
Doodley
(11,197 posts)people claim. This is why the people will pay. It is a regressive tax that will impact those who are already been screwed by Trump. This is the policy of a dimwit who has the mental age and understanding of a five year old.
Stella Delilah
(4 posts)Rising prices may seem slow now, but economists are right to flag the long-term impacttariffs often take time to fully hit consumers' wallets. Definitely something to watch closely.
progree
(12,103 posts)Yahoo Finance, 7/16/25
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/feds-bostic-recent-data-show-200457265.html
. . . a metric Bostic has focused on as evidence of inflationary pressure spreading in the economy
The 5% or more no doubt refers to the year-over-year price increases over June 2024, not the May to June increase. Still, a 5+% yoy increase in nearly half the items is quite a lot.