Instigator / Pro
11
1579
rating
34
debates
70.59%
won
Topic
#6061

The Tariffs imposed by Trump in his second term have had a negative effect on our economy so far

Status
Voting

The participant that receives the most points from the voters is declared a winner.

Voting will end in:

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Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Rated
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Minimal rating
1,500
Contender / Con
9
1702
rating
79
debates
70.25%
won
Description

Use any economic indicator you want. I won't provide a metric for "negative economic effect" because I leave that up to the debater. You can choose your own metric, but you will need to defend why it is a better metric than the ones I will use.

Metrics should be used up to the date when this debate is accepted. When I say "so far" I mean up to the time when someone accepts this challenge.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

I'll start off by stating my bias: I agree with Pro on this one, at least based on my limited knowledge of how these tariffs have affected the economy. I won't go into the "why" because, frankly, that isn't relevant to my decision.

So, why am I voting Con?

In part, I'd say it's because this debate came a little too early, and Con argued along these lines several times. Having "a negative effect on our economy" encompasses a wide variety of factors and requires some consistent shift towards the negative, not just one that happened shortly after these tariffs were imposed. And that's not an easy thing to measure. I agree with Pro that there was an immediate and obvious impact to markets as speculation led to major declines, but when the topic says "so far," it's necessarily not limited to the immediate impact of their imposition. That's part of the reason why I think this debate would have been more interesting with a broader view on the effects of these tariffs because even acknowledging that there was a negative effect doesn't mean that the net effect of tariffs have been negative. That requires a broader scope, and there have been broader knock-on effects like how these tariffs have affected supply chains and changed how other countries perceive the US as a trading partner. Those are further-reaching effects that might have done enough to satisfy the BoP under this resolution.

The other problem, though, is that economies are necessarily varied. Some companies will do very well even in a downturn, so just looking at individual stock prices or even groups of stock prices ends up being fraught. I can see why Pro wanted to focus on the broader market and why Con brought the focus to individual stocks, since the latter was an attempt to disrupt Pro's view that the broad effects of the tariffs demonstrate a clear negative effect. I think Pro needed to present a challenge to that, and one way he could have done that was flipping the script on the gold argument. One of the reasons precious metals like gold and silver are going up under this economy is the economic uncertainty that those tariffs create. People seek safe-haven assets, and since gold and silver will always be valuable, they purchase more of it and more stock in it, increasing its value. I think more discussion about the effects of economic uncertainty, resulting in part from just not knowing how to handle the up-and-down decisions on tariffs, could also have been a winning direction for Pro to take this.

Overall, I think Con does a better job explaining how all the negative effects Pro lays out are, at the very least, uncertain or unclear. Con suggests there might be positive impacts to come with regards to trade deficits, but doesn't really demonstrate any positive impacts of these tariffs yet. Still, as he points out, that's not his burden. All he had to do here was introduce enough uncertainty to make the effect of those tariffs look like a mixed bag, and just looking at the arguments presented in this debate, I think he accomplishes that. Pro's focus on the initial impact of announcing and imposing tariffs just doesn't do enough to overcome the mixed impact of their role on the economy since then, particularly in the stock market.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

1. Strongest Arguments

Pro used multiple, timely economic indicators; stock market reactions the day after the tariff announcements, consumer price spikes, GDP contractions, job losses, and export declines to show a clear, negative impact. Each metric tied directly back to the tariffs and was reinforced with real numbers.
Con repeatedly argued that the tariffs were delayed, that long-term trends dwarf short-term bumps, and leaned heavily on personal gold-investment anecdotes. These points never quite established that tariff announcements themselves had no negative effect; instead, they diffused the blame across “market nervousness,” “long-standing trade deficits,” and “natural market fickleness.”
Because Pro directly linked specific economic downturns to the tariff announcements, Pro’s case is far more convincing on substance.

2. Quality of Sources

Pro cited reputable, up-to-date data: Yale’s budget lab analysis, MarketWatch and Nasdaq charts, Bureau of Economic Analysis GDP figures, and trade retaliation updates from established law firms. These sources spoke directly to the metrics in question.
Con leaned on a mix of Reuters reports (not always directly about the second-term tariffs), StreetInsider’s broad “$3 trillion investment” item, the Tax Foundation’s future-looking tariff models, and macrotrends.com for stock history. Many of these either didn’t isolate second-term tariffs or veered slightly off topic.
Pro’s sources were both more directly relevant and more authoritative for the exact metrics under debate.

Con was more difficult read, but I will not dock the legality point since it is due to no fault of his own.

Both parties had great and professional conduct.