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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Trump tariffs: Uncertain and anxious Liverpool businesses reveal how they could be affected

City region firms fear price rises and eroded trust, Liverpool Chamber research reveals

The President's tariffs announcements have unnerved Ƶ businesses(Image: Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images)

Anxious, uncertain, and hesitant – that’s how businesses trading with the USA are feeling as they wait to find out how Donald Trump’s tariffs will affect them.

The USA was Liverpool city region’s biggest export partner in 2023, with local firms exporting more than £1bn in goods from more than 900 businesses. But the tariffs announced by President Trump this month have thrown the export market into chaos. In the short term businesses will face a 10% tariff on goods exported to the US, though automotive firms face 25% tariffs.

The tariff may not be as simple to calculate as 10% or 25%. Businesses will also have to pay tariffs on components from other countries that form part of their supply chain, potentially increasing the costs even more.

But worse even than the costs is the uncertainty over what might happen as the US administration appears to shift its position daily and as businesses fear retaliatory tariffs from elsewhere in the world. The US might also do deals with other nations or regions ahead of the Ƶ, potentially favouring competitors from those areas.

Liverpool Chamber asked dozens of member businesses in sectors including manufacturing, engineering and logistics what they thought the impact of the tariffs would be. Now it has shared some of those responses with BusinessLive, with head of international trade Elena Enciso saying “nervousness” was the main reaction as firms felt unable to plan ahead.


Delayed orders and diminishing trust


A manager at a Wirral machinery manufacturer – who asked the Chamber to stay anonymous – said: “The impact has certainly created a nervousness, I think for both us and our customers. No business makes the margin of profit to be able to approach the situation entirely without great caution.

“With rising energy costs, national insurance , wages and everything to do with our daily production, our margins are constantly having to be reconsidered, which also takes time. We are always careful with the contract terms to ensure clients pay any duty and tariffs.

“We have been in negotiation for a year with a New England based customer, and I visited them last October following their enquiry. I think the current situation will delay the order as they are a family owned company and could not afford an extra 10%. For larger companies, it is expected that as we have no competitors in the USA they will have to pay. The concern is that it takes five to six months before the order will arrive at a US port, and not having certainty over the tariff could make customers postpone.