The Les Halles shopping area in Paris seen on April 15, 2025. - Nathan Laine/Bloomberg/Getty Images
The Les Halles shopping area in Paris seen on April 15, 2025. – Nathan Laine/Bloomberg/Getty Images

President Donald Trump might want a new, “America First” world, but in the race to control inflation the United States may actually come last. That’s because, while his tariff hikes are widely expected to jack up prices at home, they could lower inflation across the pond.

The reasons are multiple, ranging from a possible influx of low-priced Chinese exports into Europe to the recent rise in the value of the euro. Aside from the benefit to consumers’ pockets, lower inflation will give European policymakers room to cut interest rates if the economy needs a helping hand — whereas the US could find it hard to lower borrowing costs if the world’s biggest economy needs a boost.

That’s just one way Trump could “Make Europe Great Again,” as economists at Nomura, a global financial services group, put it in a recent research note.

Influential forecasters at the International Monetary Fund also see Trump’s tariffs pushing inflation higher in the US, they wrote in their latest outlook report.

The main reason higher US tariffs will likely raise prices in America is because tariffs are taxes on imports, whether of finished goods or parts.

There are already signs some companies will pass on the costs of the tariffs to American consumers, rather than absorb them. For example, the Adidas CEO said earlier this week that cost increases due to higher tariffs “will eventually cause price increases” in the US. Outside of the US, “there is no reason” to raise prices because of the levies, Bjørn Gulden later added.

The impact of US tariffs introduced in 2018, during Trump’s first term, suggests an inflation bump is on the way. A 2019 study, co-authored by Mary Amiti at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, found a “complete pass-through” of those tariffs into the domestic prices of imported goods.

A shopper in New York, pictured on April 30, 2025. - Michael Nagle/Bloomberg/Getty Images
A shopper in New York, pictured on April 30, 2025. – Michael Nagle/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Even non-tariffed companies might raise their prices. “Domestic producers raise their prices when their foreign competitors are forced to raise prices due to higher tariffs,” Amiti and her co-authors wrote.

While Trump has already implemented an additional 10% tariff on goods imports from almost all countries, as well as much higher tariffs on some sectors and a gigantic duty on imports from China, the European Union has so far only threatened limited retaliatory tariffs on US goods.

The EU may yet put in place a stronger response, which could raise the prices of imports from the US, but the impact on European inflation would still be a lot smaller than what’s in the cards for the US. That’s because, in contrast with Trump’s maximalist approach, Europe would be “only putting tariffs on a single country’s imports,” George Buckley, chief European economist at Nomura, told CNN.