The game industry has been able to ignore the effects of the
trade war between the US and China for the past year, primarily because the
tariffs focused on raw materials and processed goods, not products sold to the
end user (although the average
price of a washing machine rose about $89 last year due to the tariffs.
Even though there was no tariff on them , manufacturers increased prices on
dryers a comparable amount, primarily because consumers generally purchased
them as a pair and did not notice the
price increase)..The latest announcement from the administration of more
tariffs on Chinese imports targeting some $300 billion in goods, most of which
are consumer goods means there will be a significant
impact on the gaming industry as the goods targeted include HTS 9504.90.6000, chess,
checkers and other games played on boards.
If you want to read
through the whole proposal, here
it is, but in short, due to cost savings, a lot of manufacturers in our
industry produce their products in China, making them subject to the tariff
increases. Gary Ray, owner of Black
Diamond Games, published a blog post back in 2017 looking
at his store’s top sellers and where they are produced. Not surprisingly,
roughly 80% of them come from China, meaning that, barring some settlement,
those companies will be hit with a 20-25% price increase should the tariffs
come into effect.
Looking back at tariffs in US history, their use has been
tied into the country’s government and economic policy since its founding and
before. Britain viewed the American colonies as a source of raw materials for
its industries at home and frowned upon when the colonists worked to develop
their own industry. One of the major
complaints by residents of the colonies was the refusal of the British
government to allow them to enact tariffs to protect the nascent American
industries from outside sources that could undercut them, destroying the
developing enterprises before they could
grow strong enough to stand on their own.
Not surprisingly, almost immediately after securing
independence , the new States passed laws
putting tariffs into place, using them as the primary funding source for
the federal government (The previous Articles of Confederation had required the
government to fund itself by asking the individual states for money. That
worked really well). Although Britain was the first country to utilize tariffs
as a means of protecting its industries, the United States, after its founding,
embraced the idea of protectionism far more ardently, with tariffs of up to 40%
providing up to 95% of funding for the federal government and making protectionism
the country’s economic policy from
roughly 1800 until just after World War 2, when the US took a much stronger
position on the international stage , liberalizing its trade policy and
reducing its reliance on tariffs, reducing them to a historic low for the US
wherein only 30% of imported goods were subject to tariffs and likely
cumulating in the North America Free
Trade Act, which effectively eliminated tariffs on good passing between the
US, Canada and Mexico.
So it is not as if the US
is unfamiliar with tariffs (your
sneakers currently are subject to a 48% tariff and shelled peanuts to a 132% one)
insomuch as one is getting slapped on our industry, without giving the
companies involved much time to make changes in their supply chains by either
moving production back to the US or finding low cost sources overseas. If you want voice your opposition to them,
The Toy Association has an
online petition you can fill out and submit.
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