Commerce Sec. Wilbur Ross On Steel Tariffs: Those using “scare tactics” are the same ones who sent jobs overseas @SecretaryRoss @CommerceGov https://t.co/UElekN3Wls pic.twitter.com/Dwg6lmVhVF
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) March 2, 2018
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross used a Budweiser tall boy, a can of Campbell’s soup and a can of Coca-Cola to make the case Friday for President Trump’s plan to impose steep tariffs on steel and aluminum imports.
Ross argued that the tariffs will have very little effect on consumer prices, using the props he said he purchased at a 7-11 store in Boynton Beach, Fla., to illustrate his point.
Prices will go up by maybe only fractions of a penny and won’t cause any harm, he said.
“It doesn’t mean anything,” Ross said during an interview on CNBC.
“So all this hysteria is a lot to do about nothing.”
Trump is expected next week to announce a blanket 25 percent tariff on imported steel and a 10 percent tariff on aluminum.
Opponents of the tariffs, including a number of business groups and GOP lawmakers, say they will cause prices to spike and result in retaliation by trading partners.
Ross said he still wasn’t aware of the plan’s details and whether it would apply to all imports of steel and aluminum.
“That’s what the president seemed to announce yesterday,” Ross said.
But more information is yet to come.
“So we’ll have to see the intricate details,” he said.
“But that certainly is the broad outline and therefore it will have a fairly broad effect,” he said.
“But it’s a trivial effect,” he said, referring to prices.