Companies across industries have begun issuing new fees in response to U.S. tariffs.
And with those fees, The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported Sunday (April 13), comes a message: Please don’t blame us.
In some cases, the report said, these businesses are adding flat fees, while others are charging customers a percentage of the subtotal. The idea is to pass on some of the cost of the tariffs onto consumers, especially on Chinese-made products — while placing some responsibility on President Donald Trump.
“We think transparency is the way to go here, and I am giving Trump full credit for his decision to add this tariff to all American consumers,” said Ryan Babenzien, CEO of Jolie, which sells high-end filtered shower heads that are made in China.
He told WSJ to he would add a “Trump Liberation Tariff” to online orders in the weeks ahead, though the amount of that levy will depend on how the larger tariff situation plays out the company’s tariff-cost calculations.
Other businesses are being more direct about the tariffs. For example, BigBadToyStore, which sells action figures and collectibles, recently wrote to its customers telling them it would apply a tariff-related fee to preordered items.
“I absolutely hate increasing prices to you, but the tariff situation is beyond our control,” wrote Joel Boblit, the company’s president and founder, promising to reduce or remove the charge if the tariffs decreased.
PYMNTS examined the impact the tariffs are having on the financial services world last week in a conversation with Amias Gerety, partner at QED Investors.
The uncertainty surrounding the tariffs, he told PYMNTS CEO Karen Webster, is the key element undermining financial services, which depend on stability to provide loans, extend credit and make long-term investments.
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