mino
Member
- Joined
- May 5, 2016
- Messages
- 1,994
All this sucks for a consumer or a small business. The transient chaos is the worst part.
TLDR: I do not believe you will see much of that chaos with Festool.
For those unaware, the US is, historically, using (lower) tariffs for political influence. This is par for the course but it went mass-scale after the post-WW2 consensus of Breton Woods and related. The US bought political /and military/ control over "the Western World" in exchange for a favourable tariff regime for the other parties. In this, the US tariffs (regime) was entirely political all this time. Avoiding a notion of politics when discussing it is hard to impossible.
Either way, that political arrangement seems to be coming to an abrupt end, the US forcing a re-negotiation of those arrangements "on business terms".
What is important to say here, all this very much does not look a like a brewing trade war, 1930s style. Thankfully.
As for predicting a Festool (re) action, I believe we will not see them budge on their fixed retail pricing (in US) until after the dust settles. Then there is likely to be some adjustment, but nothing as abrupt as the full tariff percentage as service costs are not affected. This does combine with the energy prices crisis in Europe, so you folk may see a +20% eventually, but that would be cumulative, not just from tariffs ..
Even in Europe, with COVID disruptions and without a fixed pricing setup, they did not really adjust prices for the COVID/war inflation up until the SYS3 transition where it got "bundled in".
TLDR: I do not believe you will see much of that chaos with Festool.
For those unaware, the US is, historically, using (lower) tariffs for political influence. This is par for the course but it went mass-scale after the post-WW2 consensus of Breton Woods and related. The US bought political /and military/ control over "the Western World" in exchange for a favourable tariff regime for the other parties. In this, the US tariffs (regime) was entirely political all this time. Avoiding a notion of politics when discussing it is hard to impossible.
Either way, that political arrangement seems to be coming to an abrupt end, the US forcing a re-negotiation of those arrangements "on business terms".
What is important to say here, all this very much does not look a like a brewing trade war, 1930s style. Thankfully.
As for predicting a Festool (re) action, I believe we will not see them budge on their fixed retail pricing (in US) until after the dust settles. Then there is likely to be some adjustment, but nothing as abrupt as the full tariff percentage as service costs are not affected. This does combine with the energy prices crisis in Europe, so you folk may see a +20% eventually, but that would be cumulative, not just from tariffs ..
Even in Europe, with COVID disruptions and without a fixed pricing setup, they did not really adjust prices for the COVID/war inflation up until the SYS3 transition where it got "bundled in".