Enterprise reporter, BBC Information

Deena Ghazarian had solely been in enterprise for a yr when the commerce insurance policies of President Donald Trump’s first time period of workplace despatched her firm right into a tailspin.
It was 2019 and her California-based agency, Austere, had simply agreed to produce a number of massive US retailers with its high-end audio and video equipment which can be largely manufactured in China.
Then Trump imposed sweeping tariffs on China, and in a single day Deena discovered herself paying a 25% surcharge on each cable and part she imported – up from zero beforehand.
She was pressured to soak up the prices and for some time thought she would go bust.
“I actually thought I’m going to begin and finish a enterprise in lower than a yr,” she says. “I had spent all this time, cash and energy, and to have one thing like this blindside you was stunning.”
The agency pulled by means of, however like quite a few different US companies it now finds itself in a strikingly comparable scenario.
Since returning to workplace in January, Mr Trump has raised tariffs on all items imported from China by 20%, and put taxes of 25% on Canadian and Mexican merchandise, solely to delay a few of them till April.

The president says he needs to pressure these international locations to do extra to cease flows of unlawful medication and migrants into America, to carry extra manufacturing again to the US, and to handle what he sees as unfair commerce imbalances.
However the duties are a lot broader in scope than final time, once they had been phased in steadily and plenty of merchandise had been granted exemptions.
Items like smartphones, desktop computer systems and tablets are actually incurring tariffs for the primary time, whereas taxes on others have climbed greater.
“US importers need to pay these taxes not the exporters,” says Ed Brzytwa, vice chairman of worldwide commerce on the Shopper Know-how Affiliation (CTA), a North American commerce physique that represents greater than 1,200 tech corporations.
“It is American companies and customers who will endure.”
Companies like Ms Ghazarian’s are significantly uncovered. China remains to be the primary provider of digital merchandise to the US, with imports totalling $146bn (£112bn) in 2023, according to official data.
In the meantime, 87% of US online game console imports got here from China that yr, 78% of smartphones, 79% of laptops and tablets, and two-thirds of screens, says the CTA.
Whereas many American corporations like Austere have diversified their provide chains away from China since Mr Trump’s first time period, international locations corresponding to Thailand, Taiwan and Vietnam nonetheless don’t provide the identical manufacturing capabilities and experience.
On the similar time, the US president is now focusing on Mexico – one other main electronics provider. And whereas home manufacturing within the US has elevated, partly on account of tariffs, it’s nonetheless restricted by greater prices and stricter rules.
“Sure, Apple now makes some iPhones in India and [the Taiwanese chipmaker] TSMC has been diversifying to Arizona,” says Mary Beautiful, a senior fellow on the Peterson Institute in Washington DC.
“However China remains to be an enormous a part of the provision chain. Relationships with new suppliers take time to develop, they’re expensive to develop.”
Analysis means that corporations cross on a big proportion of the prices of tariffs by placing up costs. Earlier this month Corie Barry, boss of US electronics retailer Greatest Purchase, stated that the “the overwhelming majority” of the brand new tariffs will “in all probability be handed on to the buyer” as a result of distributors within the trade have such small margins.
In February, Taiwanese agency Acer stated the value of its laptops would seemingly rise by 10% based mostly on the ten% duties in place on China on the time, whereas US group HP has warned its income can be decrease due to the tariffs.

Ms Ghazarian says she could have to lift her costs this yr, however worries it may backfire. “There’s a value level the place the shopper is happy with the worth of products offered.
“The second I shift above that I begin to lose clients. Excessive inflation has squeezed Individuals.”
Throughout Mr Trump’s first time period, corporations corresponding to Apple efficiently secured exemptions for merchandise, and we could but see carve-outs.
Insiders have additionally advised Mr Trump views tariffs as a negotiating tactic and will ease them if he wins concessions, as he did when China agreed to purchase extra American items in a deal reached in 2020.
Fears of a US economic slowdown may additionally make him change course.
In the interim, although, tensions look prone to escalate. China, Mexico and Canada have vowed to retaliate in opposition to any US duties imposed on them, and this week Mr Trump threatened to double tariffs on Canadian metal and aluminium solely to row again on the final minute.
He plans to impose “reciprocal tariffs” on the remainder of the world quickly, and threatened tariff will increase of as much as 60% on Chinese language items whereas on the marketing campaign path.
There’s a danger this might drive up the value of tech items world wide if China is pressured to relocate manufacturing to international locations the place labour prices are greater. Furthermore, international locations could hit again with tariffs on imported US know-how.
Ms Ghazarian says she is fearful however at the least she’s ready this time. Like many different US business-owners she bulk-ordered further stock earlier than Mr Trump took workplace, and is storing it in her east coast warehouse.
She hopes that can get the corporate by means of the following yr till it will probably “pivot” once more.
“Which may imply discovering a more cost effective solution to produce the product or doing one thing utterly totally different. It is irritating I’ve to concentrate on survival reasonably than rising my enterprise.”