How Trump’s tariffs are crushing small businesses: ‘Nobody in power seems to care’

How Trump’s tariffs are crushing small businesses: ‘Nobody in power seems to care’

The Wall Street Journal reports:

The owner of a San Francisco card-game company cashed in his money-market funds. The founder of a tent maker is looking for investors. A watch and jewelry company in Colorado is holding off on signing a new office lease. And a New Hampshire consumer-product company has laid off more than half its staff.

Around the country, small businesses that import goods made in China are taking actions—big and small—to try to outlast the current 145% tariff regime on items from that country. But many are worried that their companies won’t survive.

“Nobody in power seems to care about small business,” said Scott Anderson, owner of 5 Star North, which works with Chinese manufacturers to make its products ranging from acrylic markers to tiki torches. “At this point the only option I see is selling out the rest of what we have and shutting our doors.”

Anderson now has five employees, down from 12 at the start of the year. Three are looking for jobs and Anderson expects them to leave by the end of the month. The New Hampshire company is also running low on stock and expects to be out of most items in the next few months.

Unlike larger companies, small businesses have fewer levers to pull to help them endure the new tariff regime. Most work with a single factory or a handful of suppliers, making switching production to lower-tariff countries especially difficult. Smaller margins, thinner cash cushions and tiny staffs leave them more vulnerable to trade battles and other economic storms. [Continue reading…]

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