The Kiel Institute for the World Economy in Germany recently released a quite eye-catching study. They analyzed the tariffs imposed by the United States from January 2024 to November 2025 and found what? 96% of the costs ultimately fall on American consumers and importers, while foreign exporters only share 4%. Nearly $200 billion in tariff revenue is basically paid entirely by the U.S. domestic market.
This contradicts many politicians' statements. They often say tariffs are paid by foreign producers, but how does it actually work? Foreign exporters are quite clever—they simply stabilize prices and reduce shipment volumes. As for the costs? They are absorbed at the border by importers and then passed down through multiple layers. How much of this transmission reaches consumer prices? Only about 20%, and it takes about half a year for the effect to fully materialize. Who absorbs the remaining 80%? Importers and retailers bear it directly, with profit margins shrinking sharply.
The real chain reaction is here: such tariff manipulations gradually drain the market’s available liquidity. Consumers and businesses have less and less idle money to invest in speculative assets. Looking at the crypto market since October, it’s clear—there’s been neither a crash nor a rally, it’s like being locked in a dead water pond, completely entering a liquidity stagnation period.
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Blockwatcher9000
· 18h ago
96% domestically? Wow, these politicians really know how to spin a story. Foreigners taking the blame for 4% is just fine, haha.
The consumer side took the biggest hit, no wonder there hasn't been much movement in the crypto world recently; liquidity has really been drained.
After implementing these tariffs, retailers' profits were cut in half. Where did all the money go? Importers bore 80% of the costs, which is a bit absurd.
So, the market is stuck in a deadlock because of a lack of idle funds. No wonder crypto has lost momentum after October.
Politicians' rhetoric has long been outdated; the economic reality is right in front of us.
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TrustMeBro
· 18h ago
Oh my, it's another smoke screen from politicians. The tariff trick has finally been exposed.
Wait, 96% is spent domestically? Doesn't that mean our own people are hurting each other?
I agree that liquidity has been drained, but I don't think it's that pessimistic... Are we just going to lie flat?
The key issue is how companies will adjust after their profit margins plummet—that's the real problem.
So, is there any room for maneuver in the future? Are we just destined to hold on and wait?
This wave really exposes the nonsense politicians talk...
Wait, 80% is resisted by importers. So where does the market's final pricing power lie? How do you analyze this logic?
Actually, I'm more concerned about how this liquidity drought will impact small cryptocurrencies.
It takes half a year to transmit to consumers... No wonder the market has been so sluggish these past two months.
Tariff wars will eventually backfire on themselves. It seems that's really happening now.
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GasFeeGazer
· 18h ago
96% of the money is poured into Americans themselves. This move cracks me up; politicians' lip service is all talk.
Wait, so the crypto market is now being drained by this thing? No wonder there's been no movement since October.
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OldLeekConfession
· 18h ago
Ha, 96% of the pressure is on the domestic side, these politicians' faces are all green. Luckily, they still have the nerve to boast
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So, tariffs basically don't hit foreign businesses at all, it's all on consumers and importers to bear the blame
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The point about liquidity being drained is spot on, no wonder crypto has been like it's dead recently
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Wait, does this mean tariffs are actually a form of hidden tax? After all that fuss, it's still our own people paying
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These people are really clever, stabilizing prices by reducing supply, passing all costs to middlemen, and in the end, we consumers still have to pay
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No wonder the crypto market is hibernating, there's no money left for speculation
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20% is passed on to consumers, 80% is borne by middlemen... are companies even still doing business?
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Brilliant, tariff policies are literally choking their own market liquidity, is this self-castration?
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MeltdownSurvivalist
· 18h ago
Damn, 96% of the cost is absorbed internally. These politicians are really good at passing the buck.
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Tariff policies are just liquidity siphons. No wonder the crypto market has been dead silent these past two months.
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Wait, 80% is borne by retail traders? Then why hasn't my shopping basket's price gone up... Oh right, they're just eating the profit.
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$200 billion has literally disappeared from American consumers' pockets. That's the real inflation driver.
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Liquidity stagnation = market lock-up. This logic checks out, no wonder there's been no movement since October.
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Sellers don't lower prices, only reduce inventory. Importers pick up the slack, and we consumers end up paying the bill. This trick is perfect.
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So tariffs aren't really external; they're just a disguised way to squeeze domestic consumers. Now I see what's going on.
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Only 20% transmitted in half a year? Then the remaining 80% must have been stifled by middlemen.
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I've been saying lately that my disposable cash is running out. Turns out, it's all been quietly siphoned off by these tariffs.
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Foreign exporters: I keep prices stable and reduce shipments. Do whatever you want.
In the end, it all hits the consumers. Unbelievable.
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BottomMisser
· 18h ago
Wait, 96% of it is poured into Americans themselves? Doesn't that mean politicians have been fooling themselves all along... No wonder liquidity has been so dead recently; it turns out it was all because of tariffs draining the market's blood.
The Kiel Institute for the World Economy in Germany recently released a quite eye-catching study. They analyzed the tariffs imposed by the United States from January 2024 to November 2025 and found what? 96% of the costs ultimately fall on American consumers and importers, while foreign exporters only share 4%. Nearly $200 billion in tariff revenue is basically paid entirely by the U.S. domestic market.
This contradicts many politicians' statements. They often say tariffs are paid by foreign producers, but how does it actually work? Foreign exporters are quite clever—they simply stabilize prices and reduce shipment volumes. As for the costs? They are absorbed at the border by importers and then passed down through multiple layers. How much of this transmission reaches consumer prices? Only about 20%, and it takes about half a year for the effect to fully materialize. Who absorbs the remaining 80%? Importers and retailers bear it directly, with profit margins shrinking sharply.
The real chain reaction is here: such tariff manipulations gradually drain the market’s available liquidity. Consumers and businesses have less and less idle money to invest in speculative assets. Looking at the crypto market since October, it’s clear—there’s been neither a crash nor a rally, it’s like being locked in a dead water pond, completely entering a liquidity stagnation period.