I think the supply-chain issue is often forgotten about. Sure, we can open manufacturing businesses here to make whatever, but where do people think the materials will come from? Do they think we've had all the materials we need to manufacture goods here in America all along and we just haven't been because everything is cheaper to make overseas? Just look at this list of major exports by country. Does the US have SOME of this stuff? Sure, but enough to make enough goods for US consumers on a regular, as-needed basis? No way. We will need raw materials, and there won't be enough to go around.
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Maybe dumb people who bought the Trump line on tariffs think that, but most people know it's not true.
All the talk about bringing back manufacturing is just a smoke screen to cover the fact they're intentionally tanking the economy so the oligarchs can buy the dip and get even richer when the economy recovers. That's all it is.
I agree, this is bad logic. That said, that's not what I hear from the current regime when I hear them talking about tariffs. What I hear is them thinking this will force countries to lower barriers to Americans doing business abroad. Once those barriers are lowered, tariffs are reduced or go away altogether. For the record, I do not think this is good policy, but the intent of the policy (at lease as I read it) isn't to suddenly move all manufacturing back to the United States.