Far from getting a break, you guys are paying tax on tax. You indirectly pay for import taxes every time your companies import raw materials needed to finish their goods (added value) and then that final value (cost of import + added value) has its own sales tax. AFAIK there are no input credits for US sales tax. Then you also have VAT but at least VAT is only on the added value.
Income tax is way better as you can reduce the tax burden by including expenses/deductions. You cannot do the same for tariffs, sales tax and VAT as an end consumer. VAT is only beneficial to businesses as they can subtract inputs from outputs.
Republicans elected a president on the promise of introducing a new tax. Can't make this shit up.
> You indirectly pay for import taxes every time your companies import raw materials needed to finish their goods (added value) and then that final value (cost of import + added value) has its own sales tax.
This isn't really any different than any other kind of taxes. You pay income tax and then pay sales tax using the money that was already taxed as income. The construction company pays sales tax when it buys a backhoe, which increases construction costs and therefore real estate prices, and then you pay property tax on the higher real estate prices, and make the bigger mortgage payment with money that was already taxed as income.
The only way you'd really get something different with tariffs is if the supply chain for some product passes through the local country multiple times, i.e. it gets imported, exported and then imported again. Which probably happens occasionally but isn't the common case.
Meanwhile how many times something is taxed isn't really the relevant thing. It's, how much in total are you paying in taxes? If you pay ~10% three times, that's not really any worse than paying ~33% once. It is, of course, worse than paying 10% once.