00:00In this North Carolina brewery, most of the grains are imported from England or Germany,
00:05meaning tariffs have hit hard.
00:06The owners of Blackbird Brewery say they are satisfied with the Supreme Court's decision,
00:11but remain wary.
00:12I don't think my rosés from Germany are going to suddenly be $2 less next year.
00:16I think everything's going to pretty much stay as it is and we're all going to have
00:20to continue to eat these costs.
00:22The tariffs imposed by Donald Trump last April caused prices to rise and even cut some businesses
00:28off from their supplies.
00:29The owner of this Italian market searched far and wide and spent a lot of money to substitute
00:34products that were no longer affordable for them after tariffs hit.
00:37This stock will be difficult to sell.
00:39Yeah, I'm hopeful that things will change for the better, but right now we're still
00:46stuck with the stock that we've paid high prices for.
00:50So it's going to be a long time before a small business like ours starts to see the benefits
00:57of the tariffs again.
01:00However, some businesses like this aluminum factory will have limited challenges and in
01:06fact saw the tariffs as an advantage over competitors who import materials.
01:10It probably won't change a huge amount of the day-to-day here because we source most of our
01:16stuff domestically.
01:17And at this point, most of the extrusion market has already absorbed the new pricing that has
01:21been a result of the importing of raw goods from other places.
01:26The Supreme Court's decision does not affect tariffs applied to specific sectors, including
01:31aluminum.
01:32Metal imported into the United States from European countries, for example, will remain subject
01:37to a 50 percent tariff.
01:39massacross trading at the United States from European countries, for example, have a target of the
01:39pharmaceutical industry, so, for example, have an exact high cost, but not quite as
01:39such as the United States from Europe, the US黄
Comments