Fortune | FORTUNE 39分钟前
特朗普经济顾问承认关税损害经济,并对价格干预表示担忧
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曾为特朗普经济政策辩护的前总统经济顾问斯蒂芬·摩尔(Stephen Moore)近日表示,特朗普的关税政策损害了美国GDP,并推高了物价。他指出,关税如同税收,对企业和消费者造成了成本压力,并以咖啡价格为例说明了其影响。尽管许多经济衰退预测未能实现,摩尔认为这得益于特朗普的其他政策,如能源扩张和减税,但关税本身是得不偿失的。此外,摩尔还对特朗普直接干预商品定价的行为表示担忧,认为这不符合市场经济运作方式,并可能导致政治 favoritism 和政府过度干预企业战略。

💡 关税的负面影响:斯蒂芬·摩尔指出,特朗普政府推行的关税政策实际上是税收,导致美国GDP受损,物价上涨。他认为这些进口税增加了美国企业和消费者的成本,并以咖啡价格的上涨为例,表明关税对特定商品价格的直接推高作用,承认关税带来的经济代价是“不值得”的。

📈 经济韧性与政策归因:尽管特朗普政府的关税政策带来了负面影响,但许多年初的经济衰退预测并未发生。摩尔将此归因于特朗普政府的其他经济政策,如能源扩张、放松管制和减税,认为这些“净积极”的政策抵消了关税的拖累作用,并批评了那些预测经济崩溃的“末日先知”。

⚖️ 对价格干预的担忧:除了关税,摩尔还对特朗普直接干预市场定价的行为表示担忧。当特朗普宣布将降低特定药物(如Ozempic)的价格,并声称在降低牛肉价格方面发挥了作用时,摩尔认为这种直接干预“不是市场应有的运作方式”,这与他作为自由派经济学家的立场相悖,并暗示这可能是一种“国家资本主义”的倾向,超越了传统的自由市场原则。

🌐 政策的稳定性和可预测性:摩尔强调,对于企业投资而言,稳定和可预测的政策环境至关重要,而非临时的、随意的交易。他认为,一个真正惠及所有人的系统,不应通过政治力量来挑选赢家和输家,这意味着政府应避免过度干预,以维持市场的公平和效率。

Stephen Moore helped build the economic case for Donald Trump. Now, he’s tearing a piece of it down. In an interview with Fortune, the former presidential economic advisor and economist who literally wrote the book on Trumponomics said Trump’s tariffs have hurt GDP and pushed prices higher: “Tariffs are taxes—and taxes are bad.”

Moore, a Heritage Foundation economist, explained that import taxes have directly increased costs for U.S. businesses and consumers by “clobbering” medium-size manufacturers. He noted an article in the Wall Street Journal that said coffee is the commodity with the single fastest growth in prices right now.

“Well, guess what? We put a 50% tariff on coffee,” Moore said. “So, yeah, the coffee price went up.” 

Independent data suggests tariffs are already pressuring prices and manufacturing. In a May 2025 New York Fed survey, many exposed firms reported passing tariff costs on to customers, and about a third of manufacturers said they fully passed on those costs. Meanwhile, the Yale Budget Lab found new tariffs have led to a 2.3% increase in the overall U.S. price level and a $3,800 loss in purchasing power per household (in 2024 dollars). On the factory front, September’s ISM Manufacturing PMI came in at 49.1, marking a seventh straight month of contraction, and some manufacturers are now attaching 20% surcharges to offset tariff-induced input price increases.

At the same time, however, many of the recession predictions economists made earlier this year have not yet come to pass. When Trump imposed sweeping new tariffs in April, mainstream economic forecasts warned of disaster: Goldman Sachs put the odds of a recession at 45%, while Nobel laureate Paul Krugman wrote, “a recession seems likely” following “the biggest trade shock in history” (referring to the stock market rout following Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs announcement). Some analysts went as far as to warn of stagflation and supply-chain collapse. But nine months into the trade war, the U.S. economy—while uneven—has not fallen into the kind of crisis many expected.

“The prophets of doom were, once again, completely wrong,” Moore said. “The Biden economists who said Trump would destroy the economy have all been contradicted by real world events.” 

However, Moore credits this to other parts of the Trump agenda—energy expansion, deregulation, and tax cuts—calling them “net positive” and arguing they outweighed the drag from tariffs. When pressed on whether tariffs were worth the economic hit, Moore answered simply: “No.”

He framed his break on trade as a targeted economic correction, not a political departure.

 “I’m a big fan of Donald Trump,” he said, while still labeling tariffs a costly mistake.

Moore’s new concern: Trump is naming prices—and moving markets

Tariffs weren’t the only red flag Moore raised. Asked about Trump’s increasingly direct interventions in pricing, Moore hesitated, then acknowledged concern.

Trump declared Thursday that he will reduce the cost of Ozempic from $1,300 to $150, triggering a selloff in Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly stocks during Friday trading. Earlier that day, he also claimed he “worked [his] magic” in making a deal to bring down beef prices.

Does that kind of intervention worry Moore, a famously libertarian economist?

“A little bit, yeah,” he said. “That’s not the way markets are supposed to work.”

The direct price interventions are part of what some critics have warned is a broader shift in Trump’s economic approach, which seems to have fewer characteristics of free-market capitalism and more of a system of state intervention that resembles “state capitalism.”

As Wall Street Journal columnist Greg Ip noted, Trump is extending political control into the private sector in ways that go beyond crisis-era bailouts or targeted industrial policy. Trump has repeatedly singled out CEOs, pressured companies over business decisions, and used federal power to influence industries, from steel and autos to tech and media. 

His administration has also demanded equity stakes, “golden shares,” and revenue kickbacks from private firms in exchange for market access or approvals, raising concerns among critics about political favoritism and government intrusion into corporate strategy. 

Moore made clear that price declarations are not part of traditional conservative economic philosophy. He emphasized that predictable policy—not ad hoc deals—is what gives businesses confidence to invest.

“The best policy is always to have a system that benefits everyone,” he said. “It shouldn’t pick winners and losers.”

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Stephen Moore Donald Trump Tariffs Economy Price Intervention 关税 经济 价格干预 特朗普
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