Like
July 4th fireworks
soaring overhead, shoppers in 2021 are seeing footwear and apparel costs rise
the fastest in years point out, United States Fashion Industry
Association (USFIA) president Julia Hughes and Footwear
Distributors and Retailers of America (FDRA) president and CEO Matt
Priest.
In May these prices jumped year-over-year at the
sharpest rate in 32 years. Buried within this increasing price tag, a relic of
1930s trade policy adds even more hidden costs for consumers as they emerge
from the global pandemic.
This year marks the 91 st anniversary of the infamous
Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act that added tariffs on thousands of products across the
US With similar times of economic uncertainty and calls to protect domestic
industries, Senator Reed Smoot (R-UT) and Representative Willis Hawley (R-OR)
introduced and shepherded the massive bill through Congress. The new tariffs
deepened the Great Depression and led to retaliation on US goods abroad. In the
decades after, Congress shifted its tariff-setting responsibility over to the
White House (something to which Americans have become painfully aware thanks to
the Trump tariffs). The biggest legacy from the 91-year-old Smoot-Hawley Tariff
Act, however, is its impact of unnecessarily high prices on the shoes and
clothes we wear today.
Smoot-Hawley put in place extremely high tariffs for footwear and
apparel, and for these two sectors, high tariffs have been a reality for nearly
a century. The US places an average tariff rate of just 1.5% on imports, but it
hits footwear with 13.2% tariffs on average and apparel at 14.3%. For some of
the clothes we wear, these tariffs can reach rates as high as 43%. For shoes,
the rate can be a shocking 67%.
It is ironic that, as the US nation comes together to
celebrate its birthday this month, Uncle Sam is saddling consumers with soaring
tariffs on footwear and apparel. In the latest month, average tariffs per pair
on footwear imports rocketed to the highest April on record, in turn driving
the average import cost on footwear to the highest April on record. Similarly,
the average tariff rate on apparel imports reached the second-highest April on
record in this latest month.
These high tariffs have a real and tangible impact on
American individuals and families, because tariffs act as hidden taxes. As we
slowly emerge from a global pandemic, millions of Americans are shopping. The
employee returning to the office, the parent buying for back-to-school, the
family getting ready to travel again, the athlete finally able to compete again
– all pay this hidden, antiquated, and unnecessary tax as they buy new clothes
and shoes.
While everyone pays this hidden tax, the burden hits
working-class individuals and families the hardest. Some of the highest rates
in the entire Tariff Code fall on low-value shoes and children’s shoes. The
tariffs on classic leather loafers worn by Reed Smoot and Willis Hawley, the
authors of the infamous tariff law, would be 8.5% today. The textile upper
shoes American families buy for their children usually start with tariff rates
at 20%.
The recent sharp jump in retail prices only compounds
the high tariffs, at a time when millions remain jobless. Already, inflationary
pressures are mounting as the economy quickly picks up steam in the wake of the
pandemic. The Consumer Price Index jumped
a year-over-year 5% in May, the largest increase since August 2008. What’s
more, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Survey of Consumer Expectations for May,
fears of inflation in the year ahead hit its highest level on record. In other
words, prices are already rising sharply, with consumers fearful of more
inflation ahead. At the same time, at more than 9.3 million, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the
number of unemployed Americans remains well above levels prior to the pandemic.
As we look to these challenges in a post-pandemic world, we have to recognize
that the Tariff Code simply does not reflect the realities of the 21 st century. In today’s
world, leading footwear and apparel companies use global supply chains that
depend on international trade and support US workers. Countless new innovations
have emerged – Flyknit, athleisure categories, breathable fabrics, high-tech
water-resistant materials, and recyclable materials, to name a few.
The
antiquated apparel chapter of the US Tariff Code, meanwhile, still refers to
outdated terms like breeches, men’s and boys’ dressing gowns, petticoats,
waistcoats, washsuits, silk swimwear, corsets, and cravats. It maintains the
convoluted protection created to maintain the global quota system – even though
that tax on consumers was eliminated 15 years ago. The footwear chapter even
assesses a higher rate for women’s leather dress shoes than men’s leather dress
shoes. In fact, it refers to women and girls in numerous places as “other
persons.”
With so many advances over the past 91 years, Congress
and the President must rethink how trade policy impacts innovation when it
comes to shoes and clothes designed for US workers and US consumers.
The Biden Administration is committed to a
“worker-centric” trade policy. If the President wants to achieve meaningful and
significant relief for working-class individuals and families, we have a
recommendation that will immediately improve the US economy and return savings
to hardworking US families — immediately end the outdated footwear and apparel
tariffs. As Smoot-Hawley turns 91 this year, it is past time to end its harmful
legacy. By Just Style