Will the Trump tariff war be over by 2028? We talked to economists.


It’s hard enough to track President Trump’s tariffs from one day to the next. Imagine trying to predict where import taxes will stand in 2028.

And yet, that’s exactly what we asked four experts to do.

Trump has enacted a flurry of tariffs in the early days of his administration. Tax rates now range from zero (on certain exempted products, such as duty-free items from Canada and Mexico) to more than 100% (on many imports from China, among other trade targets).

Tariff policy seems to shift almost daily. It’s tough to predict where the rates will sit in a week, let alone in three years, at the end of Trump’s term.

But it’s a question worth asking. Consumers want to plan future car and iPhone buys. Retailers want to predict where prices are headed on clothing and computers. Manufacturers want to divine where to build their next factory.

We asked four economists and academicians to predict what Trump’s tariff policy may look like in 2028, and what factors might shape it.

Here’s what they told us. These are their comments in full, edited for clarity.

No crystal ball is needed to see that tariffs will almost certainly be higher in 2028 than when President Trump took office in January − the only question is by how much. Another outcome would be deeply surprising. For America, the tariff man cometh.

Between his first term and the early days of his second, Trump has managed to bury the United States under an avalanche of tariffs. The onslaught has been so extensive that the United States now has its highest average tariff rate in over a century − and more seem on the way. Digging the United States out of this mess will take some doing.

Unfortunately, few seem eager to grab shovels.

Congressional Republicans are highly reluctant to cross a leader who remains incredibly popular within the party, while Democrats have traditionally been more supportive of protectionist policies favored by organized labor. Assembling a veto-proof coalition to restore sanity to US tariff policy is a tall order.

Absent such an intervention, President Trump’s de facto tariff switch is likely to remain in the ‘on’ position. Although some relief could be found in ‘deals’ with certain countries, or as part of a market-calming exercise, a complete unwinding is deeply improbable.

Container ships are seen docked at Kwai Chung Container terminal in Hong Kong on April 2, 2025. Asian markets edged up as nervous investors brace for US President Donald Trump's wave of tariffs later in the day, though speculation about what he has in store is stoking uncertainty on trading floors.
Container ships are seen docked at Kwai Chung Container terminal in Hong Kong on April 2, 2025. Asian markets edged up as nervous investors brace for US President Donald Trump’s wave of tariffs later in the day, though speculation about what he has in store is stoking uncertainty on trading floors.

In 2028, average tariffs could be 5% − about double their level when Trump took office. Or they could be 25%, or even higher than that.



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