President Trump’s threat this week to impose a 50% tariff on U.S. copper imports targets a vital metal that is widely used in many products and industries. That could lead to higher prices for everything from appliances and electronics to cars and home repairs, economists and industry experts said.
Although Mr. Trump has yet to officially announce the metal tariff, the threat alone caused copper prices to shoot up 13% on Tuesday, reaching a record high.
Ryan Young, a senior economist at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a nonpartisan think tank, said copper is an integral component in electrical wiring and plumbing, as well being used as a heat conductor in radiators and household appliances. He worries that a hefty copper tariff will trigger inflation.
“It’s bad news all around,” Young said of Mr. Trump’s proposed copper tariff. “If companies’ costs go up they pass them along to consumers, so we’d see higher prices for home repairs and anything that uses copper.”
Copper tariffs could also make maintaining the nation’s electric grid more expensive and drive up household energy costs, Young said. “It would negatively affect the electricity industry and anybody who uses electricity.”
Mr. Trump has said that tariffs provide financial incentives to ramp up domestic production, including of critical materials like copper, and help create manufacturing jobs.
Ripple effects
The biggest users of copper — and therefore most exposed to the tariff increase — include a vast range of industries, covering everything from construction to semiconductors, electric vehicles and renewable energy components such as solar panels, according to industry data.
Daan de Jonge, copper demand and prices lead analyst at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, said in a research note that “a 50% price hike will have inevitable ripple effects on the cost of new infrastructure, the cost of housing the cost of fridges, cars, air conditioning.”
For consumers, that means the cost of appliances such as refrigerators and air conditioners, as well as EVs, would likely rise if this 50% tariff goes into effect, according to analysts.
Carveouts for key partners?
The U.S. relies heavily on copper imports from Chile, followed by Canada. The U.S.’s net copper imports met 53% of U.S. demand for copper last year, according to Morgan Stanley research.
Experts note that Mr. Trump isn’t certain to hike duties on copper, saying his proposal could be aimed more at securing concession from exporters.
Although the U.S. could ramp up domestic copper production, it would take years to significantly increase output, Reiman said. “We aren’t ready. The mines would have to be built out, and that’s typically a multi-year process.”
The sectoral tariff threats come after Mr. Trump this week announced stiff new tariff rates on 20 nations that have not yet reached trade agreements with the U.S and that he said would take effect on Aug. 1. He outlined the new rates, posted in nearly identical letters on his Truth Social social media platform, as a 90-day pause on so-called “reciprocal” levies was set to expire on Wednesday.
contributed to this report.