Fed vindicates Trump on Tariffs – shocks economists

A new Federal Reserve research paper looked at 150 years of real-world data (1870–2020) on big tariff changes in the US, UK, and France.

What they found (the opposite of what most economists have always said):

  • When countries raise tariffs, consumer prices go down, not up.
  • At the same time, unemployment goes up a bit.

In simple terms: tariffs act like a brake on the whole economy (less overall spending/demand), which keeps inflation lower, even though they make imported goods technically more expensive.

Why this matters right now (2025):

  • Trump put roughly 18% tariffs on many imports this year.
  • Most economists and the Federal Reserve warned this would cause high inflation and said they wouldn’t cut interest rates because of it.
  • This study says those warnings were probably wrong — history shows tariffs usually reduce inflation, not increase it.
  • So the Fed may have kept interest rates too high for the wrong reason.

Bottom line: 150 years of evidence suggests Trump’s tariff policy is not inflationary the way almost everyone thought. Instead, tariffs seem to cool price increases while slowing the economy a little — exactly the opposite of the standard textbook story.

More detail in Breitbart article here.