"water is wet" kind of study, as tariffs are precisely supposed to increase price for consumers for imported goods... But the last 3 paragraphs are interesting:
- Importers raised the price more than needed (i.e. blame tarifs to increase their profit margin)
- Price increases took one year to fully reflect to the customers, and persisted nearly one year after the tariffs expired.
- chicken-tax-like loopholes implemented wherever possible (for wine apparently it's raising the ABV to more than 14%)
Your first 2 points make me extra bitter about COVID.
Less store hours. Higher prices. Inflation. People in school got a terrible education and it affected my workforce. (But hey 1% of people died, as predicted if we did nothing at all... )
It only reinforces the importance of competition over protectionism.
I used to be a walmart fan, but my local store is cheaper now. I didn't bother to look at prices until things were getting silly.
You remind me of the fact that humans do not in fact have sensors in the skin to detect specifically wetness.
I think given the amount of ideas floating around, it is occasionally good to revisit things that are "known", just in case some underlying assumption changed, especially for economics which is harder to get right as it deals a lot with what human want and do.