A new Federal Reserve study reveals that sweeping U.S. tariffs implemented in 2025 by President Donald Trump are entirely responsible for the recent surge in core goods inflation, hitting consumers with a direct, "dollar-for-dollar" price increase.
Driving The Inflation Spike
According to the April 8 FEDS Note authored by economists Robert Minton, Madeleine Ray, and Mariano Somale, aggressive trade policies enacted last year have dramatically shifted the U.S. economic landscape.
The researchers estimate that tariffs implemented through November 2025 raised core goods personal consumption expenditure (PCE) prices by a staggering 3.1% through February 2026.
Crucially, the economists determined that these levies "can explain the entirety of excess inflation in the core goods category relative to pre-pandemic inflation rates." Furthermore, the tariffs contributed to a 0.8% boost in the broader core PCE index, which is the central bank's preferred inflation metric.
A 'Dollar-For-Dollar' Consumer Burden
The findings firmly dispel the notion that foreign exporters or domestic retailers absorbed the costs of these trade barriers. Instead, the data confirms a "full dollar-for-dollar pass-through" into relative consumer prices.
"If retailers' acquisition costs for a good rise $1 because of tariffs, they charge $1 more for that good seven months later," the report explained.
While the researchers noted that the 2025 tariffs passed through to consumer prices more slowly than the 2018-19 tariffs on China, the data so far suggest that the pass-through of last year's tariffs is now "effectively complete."
Mitigating Factors And Outlook
The inflationary damage could have been even more severe. The researchers highlighted that a 10-percentage-point tariff reduction on China implemented in November 2025 prevented an even larger spike, heavily offsetting the effects of reciprocal tariffs introduced in August.
With the pass-through process stabilizing, the Fed's analysis suggests core goods inflation would be expected to return to pre-pandemic levels soon, provided no additional trade shocks occur.
How Have Markets Performed In 2026?
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