Your smartphone’s battery is holding less of a charge these days and you’re thinking about buying a new iPhone. How much will it cost if you buy one next week? How about if you wait until next month? President Donald Trump’s tariff roller coaster has made this once simple question exponentially harder to answer. Over the last two weeks, he has ratcheted up massive tariffs on Chinese exports, suddenly declared electronics like laptops and smartphones exempt, then just as swiftly hinted that the reprieve may or may not be short-lived.
The whipsawing on how much anything made outside the U.S. costs is leaving businesses and consumers alike confused. And unlike many of his second-term policies, it’s much harder to spin this confusion as intentional on Trump’s part.
Unlike many of his second-term policies, it’s much harder to spin this confusion as intentional on Trump’s part.
Trump has given no clear explanation for precisely what he hopes his tariffs will achieve beyond other countries’ treating the U.S. with more respect. The possibility that this supposed lack of respect might have more to do with him than with America seems not to have crossed his mind.In part, the lack of clarity reflects competing voices within the administration, who are pursuing their own sub-goals under Trump’s broader demand for tariffs. But the lack of an overall strategy means that neither Trump nor his team have specified any revenue targets or even coherent arguments for what a win looks like. Countries have begun sending negotiators to work out new trade deals after Trump’s 90-day pause on the most punishing of the tariffs, but there’s no certainty that those deals will be upheld in the long run — or whether they’ll even matter when the country’s import duties are based solely on the president’s whims.
It’s not as though tariffs are the only policy of Trump’s for which there’s little clarity for those most heavily affected. But one could argue that with some of those policies, the cloud of uncertainty is part of the point. The various shifts and escalations in Trump’s immigration crackdown have frustrated federal judges and left Justice Department lawyers struggling to answer basic questions in court. But the White House likely sees this unpredictability as both spreading fear among undocumented immigrants, encouraging their so-called self-deportation, and deterring for migrants who might otherwise cross the border.








