Trump plan for tariffs on Mexican goods finds little support in Arizona
Valley lawmakers, business officials, and experts, including Professor of Economics Dennis Hoffman, blasted the administration's threat to impose a tax on Mexican goods in hopes of cutting immigration.
The tariff threat will not only affect currency exchange rates, according to Professor of Economics Dennis Hoffman, who is the director of the L. William Seidman Research Institute.
In this article published May 31, 2019, on Cronkite News:
The Mexican peso deteriorated about 2.5% percent today. That means on exports, it’ll cost 2.5% more before Mexico even retaliates with any reciprocal tariffs, which they are likely to do. Tariffs unequivocally are paid by the exporters and the importers of these products and they get passed on downstream to the consumer.
– Dennis Hoffman, director of the L. William Seidman Research Institute
Latest news
- $35 million NASPO gift advances procurement and ASU's global leadership in supply chain management
The historic commitment from the National Association of State Procurement Officials establishes…
- AI research earns triple honors
Assistant Professor of Information Systems Tian Lu recognized with three INFORMS awards for…
- After NHL exit, W. P. Carey alums advocate for the future of Arizona hockey
Olympian Lyndsey Fry (MBA '18) and Garrett Niederkorn (BS Management Entrepreneurship '15, MBA '…