2026年2月20日 / 美国东部时间下午1:23 / CBS新闻
美国一些最大的公司表示,它们正在将与关税相关的成本转嫁给消费者,沃尔玛本周将其销售的某些商品价格上涨归因于更高的进口关税。
周四的第四季度财报电话会议上,沃尔玛表示,一般商品的通胀率——即该零售商向消费者收取的电子产品和电器等产品价格——上涨了3%以上,高于7月至9月的1.7%。这些产品大多从海外进口,且受到特朗普关税的影响。
沃尔玛首席财务官约翰·大卫·雷尼(John David Rainey)在财报电话会议上对分析师表示:“关税相关成本推高了多个类别的商品价格。”
其他公司最近也指出,特朗普的关税是推高价格的因素之一。哥伦比亚运动服饰公司(Columbia Sportswear)高管本月早些时候在财报电话会议上表示,这家户外服装零售商计划将其春秋季商品价格提高“个位数百分比”。
该公司还表示,已采取其他措施减轻关税影响,包括与工厂谈判降低制造成本,以及将海外生产转移到对美关税较低的国家。
同样在服装行业,牛仔品牌李维斯(Levi Strauss)最近提到,更高的关税税率导致其提高价格。该公司在1月份与分析师的电话会议上指出:“我们实施了额外的定价措施,以进一步减轻关税影响。”
公司称,迫使它们提高价格的其他因素还包括劳动力和医疗保险成本的上升。
白宫驳斥了关税加剧通胀并损害经济的说法。
白宫发言人库什·德赛(Kush Desai)在给CBS新闻的声明中表示:“过去一年,由于特朗普总统的关税政策,美国人一直听到关于迫在眉睫的通胀危机或经济灾难的说法。但美国人实际上经历的是通胀降温、实际工资增加1400美元以及GDP增长加速。特朗普政府将继续实施减税、放松管制和能源充足的促进增长、提高购买力的议程。”
衡量日常购买商品成本变化的消费者价格指数(CPI)在1月份同比上涨2.4%,低于预期,是自2025年5月以来最慢的通胀步伐。
特朗普政府官员表示,关税还将通过建立更公平的全球贸易条款、提振国内制造业并为联邦政府创造数十亿美元收入来缩减美国赤字。
关税是否在推高通胀?
尽管上月通胀有所降温,但仍居高不下。PNC首席经济学家格斯·福彻(Gus Faucher)表示,周五发布的政府数据显示,另一个备受关注的价格指标——个人消费支出(PCE)——在2025年底加速增长。
他在给投资者的报告中表示:“截至2025年4月,商品价格还在同比下降,但到12月已上涨1.7%,因为企业将更高的关税成本转嫁给了消费者。”
Adobe的数据还显示,1月份在线销售商品的成本环比上涨4%,是该市场研究公司追踪电子商务价格12年来最大的单月增幅。Adobe称,电子产品、电脑、电器、家具和床上用品的价格上涨推动了平均价格的上升。
纽约联邦储备银行最近的研究发现,2025年特朗普政府征收的关税成本中,美国企业和消费者承担了近90%。
特朗普政府对这些研究结果提出异议。周三在接受CNBC采访时,白宫经济顾问凯文·哈塞特(Kevin Hassett)驳斥了纽约联邦储备银行的研究,称其“是我见过的最糟糕的论文”。
2月5日,潘兴宏观经济(Pantheon Macroeconomics)的经济学家在研究报告中表示,到2025年底,企业仅将约一半的关税成本转嫁给了消费者。但这家投资咨询公司预计,零售商将在2026年初进一步提高价格。
据专注于经济的无党派政策研究中心耶鲁预算实验室(Yale Budget Lab)称,截至1月19日,美国进口商品的平均关税税率为16.9%,是1932年以来的最高水平。该机构指出,服装、皮革制品、电子产品和汽车等商品类别最容易受到进口成本上升的影响。
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/business-owners-react-to-supreme-court-ruling-against-trumps-tariffs/
Walmart and other big companies say tariffs are forcing them to hike prices
February 20, 2026 / 1:23 PM EST / CBS News
Some of the biggest U.S. companies say they are passing tariff-related costs on to consumers, with Walmart this week attributing a jump in prices for certain goods sold by the retailer to higher import duties.
In a fourth-quarter earnings call on Thursday, Walmart said that inflation for general merchandise — or the prices it charges consumers for products like electronics and appliances — rose more than 3%, up from 1.7% between July and September. Most of those products are imported from overseas and are subject to Mr. Trump’s tariffs.
“[T]ariff-related costs lifted prices across many categories,” Walmart Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey told analysts.
Other companies have also recently pointed to Mr. Trump’s tariffs as one factor driving up prices. Columbia Sportswear executives said in an earnings call earlier this month that the outdoor clothing retailer plans to raise its prices for spring and fall merchandise by a “high single-digit percent.”
The company also noted it has taken other steps to mitigate the impact of tariffs, including negotiating lower manufacturing costs with its factories and shifting overseas production to countries facing lower U.S. tariffs.
Also in the apparel sector, denim company Levi Strauss recently cited the impact of steeper levies in raising prices, noting in a January call with analysts that “we implemented additional pricing actions to further mitigate tariffs.”
Other factors companies say have forced them to raise prices include rising labor and health insurance costs.
The White House disputes that tariffs are fueling inflation and hurting the economy.
“Americans have been hearing about one imminent inflation crisis or economic disaster after another for the past year because of President Trump’s tariffs,” White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement to CBS News. “Americans have instead experienced cooling inflation, $1,400 in increased real wages and accelerating GDP growth. The Trump administration will continue to deliver a pro-growth affordability agenda of tax cuts, deregulation and energy abundance.”
The Consumer Price Index, which measures changes in the cost of commonly purchased goods, rose a cooler than expected 2.4% in January compared to the same month a year ago — the slowest pace of inflation since May 2025.
Trump administration officials have said tariffs will also shrink the U.S. deficit by establishing fairer global trade terms, energize the domestic manufacturing sector and generate billions in federal revenue.
Are tariffs driving up inflation?
Although inflation cooled last month, it remains sticky. Government data released on Friday shows that another closely watched price gauge — Personal Consumption Expenditures — accelerated at the end of 2025, according to PNC chief economist Gus Faucher.
“Goods prices, which were falling on a year-ago basis as recently as April 2025, were up 1.7% in December as businesses pass along higher tariffs to consumers,” he said in a note to investors.
Data from Adobe also shows that the cost of goods sold online jumped 4% in January from the previous month — the largest one-month increase in the 12 years since the market research firm began tracking e-commerce prices. Higher prices on electronics, computers, appliances, furniture and bedding drove the higher average price increases, according to Adobe.
Recent research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that U.S. businesses and consumers bore almost 90% of the cost of the Trump administration’s levies in 2025.
The Trump administration disputes those findings. In a CNBC interview on Wednesday, White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett dismissed the New York Fed’s research, calling it “the worst paper I’ve ever seen.”
In a Feb. 5 research note, economists from Pantheon Macroeconomics said that businesses had passed only about half of the cost of tariffs to consumers by the end of 2025. But the investment advisory firm expects retailers to further hike prices early in 2026.
As of Jan. 19, the average U.S. tariff rate on imports was 16.9%, its highest level since 1932, according to the Yale Budget Lab, a nonpartisan policy research center focused on the economy. The group noted that goods including apparel, leather products, electronics and motor vehicles are among the product categories most exposed to higher import costs.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/business-owners-react-to-supreme-court-ruling-against-trumps-tariffs/
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