Trump Administration Tariff Revenue Declines as Low Inflation Boosts Stock Market Sentiment
BlockBeats News, January 6th, the latest data shows that US inflation pressure is significantly lower than market expectations. The latest CPI announced by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics is 2.7%, significantly lower than Wall Street's previous consensus forecast of 3.1%, catching the market off guard.
Since Trump announced the "Liberation Day" tariffs in April last year, the market has generally expected tariffs to increase inflation. However, two recent studies by the San Francisco Fed pointed out that historical experience shows that tariffs have not triggered a large-scale inflation surge. This is because importers have been able to transfer their supply chains, circumvent tariffs, negotiate exemptions with various countries, and significantly dilute the effective tax rate. The studies believe that the negative impact of tariffs on economic growth and employment is more pronounced, but the magnitude of the inflationary effect is much lower than expected.
A report from Pantheon Macroeconomics shows that US tariff revenue has started to decline:
· October peak: $34.2 billion
· November: $32.9 billion
· December: $30.2 billion
Analysts point out that the current average effective tariff rate in the US is about 12%. According to institutions, the impact of tariffs on Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation is about 0.9 percentage points, with 0.4 percentage points already digested by the market. The main inflationary shock may have passed, and core PCE is expected to approach the 2% target within the year.
The lower-than-expected tariff revenue has also weakened the US government's fiscal space. Treasury Secretary Bessemer previously expected tariffs to generate $500 billion to nearly $1 trillion in revenue, but calculations by independent institutions show that tariff revenue in 2025 may only be $261 billion to $288 billion. Currently, the US fiscal year 2026 has accumulated a deficit of $439 billion, and the total national debt exceeds $38.5 trillion. With declining tariff revenue, the sustainability of Trump's proposed "Trump Account" and universal cash subsidy plan faces challenges.
You may also like

Polymarket vs. Kalshi: The Full Meme War Timeline

Consensus Check: What Consensus Was Born at the 2026 First Conference?

Resigned in Less Than a Year of Taking Office, Why Did Yet Another Key Figure at the Ethereum Foundation Depart?

Russian-Ukrainian War Prediction Market Analysis Report

Ethereum Foundation Executive Director Resigns, Coinbase Rating Downgrade: What's the Overseas Crypto Community Talking About Today?

Who's at the CFTC Table? A Rebalancing of American Fintech Discourse
AI Trading vs Human Crypto Traders: $10,000 Live Trading Battle Results in Munich, Germany (WEEX Hackathon 2026)
Discover how AI trading outperformed human traders in WEEX's live Munich showdown. Learn 3 key strategies from the battle and why AI is changing crypto trading.
Elon Musk's X Money vs. Crypto's Synthetic Dollars: Who Wins the Future of Money?
How do Synthetic Dollars work? This guide explains their strategies, benefits over traditional stablecoins like USDT, and risks every crypto trader must know.

The Israeli military is hunting a mole on Polymarket

Q4 $667M Net Loss: Coinbase Earnings Report Foreshadows Challenging 2026 for Crypto Industry?

BlackRock Buying UNI, What's the Catch?

Lost in Hong Kong

Gold Plunges Over 4%, Silver Crashes 11%, Stock Market Plummet Triggers Precious Metals Algorithmic Selling Pressure?

Coinbase and Solana make successive moves, Agent economy to become the next big narrative

Aave DAO Wins, But the Game Is Not Over

Coinbase Earnings Call, Latest Developments in Aave Tokenomics Debate, What's Trending in the Global Crypto Community Today?

ICE, the parent company of the NYSE, Goes All In: Index Futures Contracts and Sentiment Prediction Market Tool
