Austan Goolsbee, president and CEO of the Bank of the Federal Reserve of Chicago, speaks with the New York Economic Club in New York City, USA, April 10, 2025.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters
Business owners and CEO are already supplying in the inventory, and some American buyers are buying large ticket items in advance of President Donald Trump’s rates. The sudden purchase purchase could cause a “high artificial” level of economic activity, said the president of the Bank of the Federal Reserve of Chicago, Austan Goolsbee.
“That preventive shopping boy is probably more pronounced on the commercial side,” Goolsbee told CBS “” Face the Nation “on Sunday, adding:” We listen a lot about the preventive construction of inventories that last 60 days, 90 days, 90 days, [was] It will be more uncertainty. “
Companies store inventory and consumers that accelerate their purchase decisions: buy a Apple iPhone Now, for example, instead of waiting until the fall, you can inflate the economic activity of the United States in April and lead to a slowdown in the coming months, Goolsbee suggested.
“The activity may seem artificial in the initial one, and then for the summer, it could fall, because people have bought everything,” he said.
The sectors affected by Trump’s tariffs, particularly the automotive industry, are more likely of a SC. Heavy to a great inventory now before importing taxes on goods from other countries that increase enhanced, Goolsbee said. Many pieces of cars, electronic components and other large ticket consumption items are manufactured in China, for example, which currently faces a total tariff rate of imported goods to the United States.
Trump tariffs on a group of other countries are currently in the middle of a 90 -day pause, with a 10% basal rate rate instead of applying to all imported goods in all areas. The pause will expire on July 9, with Trump promoting a series of tariff negotiations with foreign leaders from time to time.
“We do not know, within 90 days, when the rates are checked, we do not know how great they will be,” said Goolsbee.
Some US business owners who buy products manufactured in China say that they can no longer afford in inventory. Matt Rolens, owner and CEO of Granite Bay, the News Company based in California, Dragon Glassware, says that its products are temporarily retaining in China because they pay the 145% tax that forces it to the durable prices of the prices of the byer by
Rollens has enough inventory in the US to last approximately until June, and expects the tariffs to go back by then, he told CNBC that he did it on April 11.
Leaving aside short -term uncertainty and financial pain, the Fed Goolsbee expressed optimism about the country’s long -term economic perspective.
“If we can overcome this, it is important to remember: the hard data that arrived in April were quite good. The inempleal rate [was] Around full constant employment, inflation [was] Going down, “he said.