Tech News
Tariffs won’t make America great again: Export-Import Bank’s former chairman and president

In the rush toward what President Trump thinks of as a more realistic and transactional world of dealmaking in diplomacy, he has lost sight of the strategic advantages free trade continues to provide the U.S. While it remains to be seen whether these on-again, off-again tariffs will last, lasting damage has already been done.
As Trump doubles down on his “America First” rhetoric, he is, at best, ignoring the most crucial fact about the American economy: It runs on trade, that is Americans buying imported goods and American companies exporting to the rest of the world. The United States is the number two exporter in the world, which means that retaliatory tariffs will cause tremendous harm to American businesses and farmers and their workers. Our economy is powered not just by physical goods crossing borders, but by a vast service sector that relies on cooperation with other countries. By instigating a trade war against our geographical neighbors, closest allies, and economic partners, Trump risks stopping the engine of American prosperity.
We’re already seeing the consequences of this unpredictable environment play out with our northern neighbor. Canada—historically our closest ally and trading partners—is now being treated like an economic adversary. The result? Disruption to the deeply integrated economies and value chains on both sides of the border.
Take the automotive industry, a cornerstone of North American manufacturing, which stands to suffer significantly. Vehicles and components frequently cross the Canada-Mexico-U.S. border multiple times during production, with supply chains carefully optimized over decades. A 25% tariff could inflate the price of a new vehicle by as much as $12,000. This not only hurts American consumers, but also puts thousands of jobs at risk.
NAFTA, the predecessor to the United States-Mexico-Canada agreement, was originally proposed by Trump’s political idol Ronald Reagan, who correctly thought the U.S. needed a way to compete with an integrated European market. One of NAFTA’s follow-on effects has been allowing U.S. companies to compete with Asian automakers. By abandoning free trade, we abandon these long-term advantages, with no new strategic advantages to replace them, only Trump’s vague promises of a slate of better bi-lateral deals. As the car industry may go, so other industries may follow.
Beyond manufacturing, Trump’s tariffs will hurt a range of industries, from agriculture to technology. American farmers, already struggling with challenging market conditions, now face the prospect of losing access to crucial export markets. Meanwhile, innovative tech companies may find themselves cut off from global talent pools and collaborative research opportunities.
Trump has said he wants to make the U.S. more open to foreign direct investment (FDI). The bitter irony is that the chaos caused by his proposed tariffs is likely to discourage it. As Dave Cote once famously said, “capital is a coward,” meaning that investment always flows toward safety and predictability. Faced with Trump’s chaos and unpredictability, other nations looking to do business in North America may now choose to locate elsewhere, taking jobs and economic growth with them.
The near daily drama on proposed tariffs also distracts voters and policymakers from more effective ways to boost American competitiveness. Instead of erecting trade barriers, we should be investing in education, infrastructure, and research and development. These are the undisputed foundations of long-term economic growth and innovation—areas where America has historically excelled.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s recent comment that “access to cheap goods is not the essence of the American dream” entirely misses the point of free trade. So-called cheap goods are no trivial thing. Lower prices for food, clothing, and other essentials have alleviated economic pressure on American families for decades, and they have raised our collective standard of living and for many years helped keep inflation in check. That is, in fact, the essence of the American dream. Putting America first should mean having trade policies that consider the real interests of U.S. consumers, and not allegiance to an unproven, extreme ideology of purely transactional trade and diplomacy.
Instead, we should redefine what “America First” should really mean: fostering fair and transparent relationships, investing in our workforce and infrastructure, doubling down on innovation, and using trade to deepen our relationships with those long-standing allies in Europe and East Asia who share our values. When we build bridges to our allies, not walls, everyone stands to benefit.
The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.
Read more:
- Trump tariffs: Stealing from the China playbook—to boost car making in America
- Are Trump’s trade and tariffs tantrums repairing market failures or eroding global trust?
- The best psych-out artists know how to mess with your mind, but Trump’s push for tariffs shows how this strategy can backfire
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Tech News
Americans see growing risk they’ll get turned down for loans

A growing share of US consumers say they’re not seeking loans because they expect to be refused amid tight credit conditions, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The share of discouraged borrowers, defined as respondents who said they needed credit but didn’t apply because they didn’t expect to get approved, climbed to 8.5% in the New York Fed’s latest Survey of Consumer Expectations. That’s the highest level since the study began in 2013.
The perceived likelihood of being rejected increased across different forms of credit, from cards to secured loans to buy homes and cars. Roughly one-third of auto loan applicants expected to get turned down, the highest share since the start of the series, while nearly half of all respondents in the February survey said it’ll be harder to get credit in a year’s time.
The data adds to a picture of increasingly fragile household finances for many Americans, as a cooling job market slows wage gains while high borrowing costs are making bills harder to pay. Delinquency rates remain low by pre-pandemic standards but they’ve been edging higher in most categories, and lenders are turning cautious.
More than four in 10 US homeowners who sought to refinance their mortgages had their applications rejected, according to the February survey, quadruple the share in October 2023.
With mortgage lending rates still much higher than a couple of years ago, many people seeking a refi are likely trying to tap equity accumulated during the recent housing boom in order to meet other debt costs or expenses, rather than to reduce their monthly payments. Inability to do so could put some under pressure to sell their homes.
Meanwhile, the share of consumers in the New York Fed survey who said they could come up with $2,000 in the event of an unexpected need declined to 63%, a new series low.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Tech News
Jet maker Bombardier warns Canada that F-35 review may backfire

The head of Canadian jet manufacturer Bombardier Inc. raised concerns about Canada’s decision to review a contract to buy dozens of F-35 fighter jets from Lockheed Martin Corp., the country’s latest response to the trade war with the US.
“Canceling the F-35s might be a good idea, but we need to think about it,” Bombardier Chief Executive Officer Eric Martel told a business audience in Montreal. “We have contracts with the Pentagon. Will there be reciprocity there?”
Bombardier has invested in recent years in its defense unit, which converts jets into military aircraft. It has two contracts with the US government, one for communication aircraft and another for surveillance planes.
New Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney ordered a review of the F-35 purchase agreement, a C$19 billion ($13.3 billion) deal for 88 jets that was finalized in 2023. The deal hasn’t been scrapped, but the government needs to “make sure that the contract in its current form is in the best interests of Canadians and the Canadian Armed Forces,” a defense ministry spokesperson said.
Earlier this month, President Donald Trump put 25% tariffs on imports on Canadian goods that don’t fall under the US–Mexico–Canada Agreement, and added 25% import taxes to aluminum and steel products. He has repeatedly said he believes Canada should be the 51st US state — a recent poll showed that 90% of Canadians disagree — and members of his administration have taken the Canadian government to task for its low level of military spending.
“Trump isn’t wrong on everything,” Martel said. “We’ve been hiding behind our big brother for a while, and we’re completely dependent on him militarily.”
In 2023, Canada finalized a deal to order as many as 16 military surveillance aircraft from Boeing Co. as part of an investment worth more than $7 billion, rejecting a competing Bombardier proposal.
The jet maker’s shares have dropped 18% since Trump was elected on Nov. 5, but are still up about 50% over the past year.
In February, Bombardier set aside its financial outlook for the year because of risk and uncertainty about tariffs. “Not providing guidance is the most responsible thing for us to do,” Martel said at the time. About 60% of Bombardier’s business comes from the US, and its planes are currently built and shipped under the rules of the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement.
Bombardier has a complicated supply chain that includes manufacturing in US and Mexico with more than 2,800 US-based suppliers across 47 states. US-made parts and systems make up a significant proportion of the cost of its aircraft.
The Global 7500, the firm’s flagship jet, has wings made in Texas, avionics from Iowa and motors made in Indiana. More than half of its building costs are tied to US manufacturing, but the assembly and finishing are done in Canada, which makes the jet subject to tariffs.
Two-thirds of Canada’s aerospace industry exports depend on the US market, Martel said.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Tech News
Gavin Newsom is welcoming prominent conservatives on his new podcast, but critics say it’s risky to align himself ‘in a slightly unpredictable middle’

LOS ANGELES (AP) — As a wounded Democratic Party struggles to regroup, California Gov. Gavin Newsom is holding mostly chummy conversations with prominent conservatives on a new podcast he’s touting as a way for the party to grapple with the MAGA movement’s popularity.
In doing so, he appears intent on showing he is more than a progressive warrior. But he has stunned some members of his own party by agreeing with his guests on issues such as restricting transgender women and girls in sports. Newsom called dismantling police departments “lunacy” and remained silent when Steve Bannon, an architect of President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, falsely said Trump won the 2020 presidential election.
The programs provide a fresh lens on a liberal governor and potential 2028 presidential candidate who not long ago was enlisted as a chief surrogate for President Joe Biden’s campaign. Ahead of the 2022 midterms, he chastised national Democrats for being too passive in defending abortion rights and same-sex marriage, an issue he championed two decades ago as mayor of San Francisco.
Newsom said his choice of podcast guests reflects his interest in knowing more about how Republicans organized in the last election, when Trump swept every battleground state and Republicans locked up majorities in the House and Senate.
“I think we all agreed after the last election that it’s important for Democrats to explore new and unique ways of talking to people,” he added in an email to supporters.
Newsom’s party criticizes his guests
After spotlighting Bannon, conservative radio personality Michael Savage and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, Newsom will quickly diversify his lineup: His next guest is Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, last year’s Democratic vice presidential nominee. But some Democrats say the governor, who is widely viewed as having presidential ambitions, is selling out Democratic values in favor of his own political aspirations.
Aimee Allison, the founder and president of She the People, a national organizing hub for electing women of color, said Newsom is betraying California and “showing his weakness and naked ambition.” Allison was among Democrats who helped Newsom defeat a 2021 recall attempt.
“We need a governor that will defend California’s values, support vulnerable children, LGBTQ+ people, Black people, women, and everyone else who’s in the line (of) fire of the Trump administration. Instead he is making the worst moves possible in a time of rising fascism. He’s trying to remake himself to be acceptable to MAGA,” Allison wrote in an email, referring to supporters of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement.
California Assembly member Chris Ward and state Sen. Carolina Menjivar, who lead the state’s LGBTQ+ legislative caucus, said they were “profoundly sickened” by Newsom’s statement on transgender athletes. And Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, another potential 2028 candidate, said of Bannon, “I don’t think we should give him oxygen on any platform — ever, anywhere.”
Finding a new audience
Podcasts have become an increasingly important venue in politics, and as Newsom considers a national campaign he has been praised by some for venturing into unfamiliar territory.
Democratic consultant Bill Burton, who was national press secretary for former President Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign, credited Newsom with trying to reach voters who might not engage with traditional media.
“I think there are going to be a lot of people this alienates in the short term,” Burton said. But, he added, Democrats “have to take a lot of big swings.”
The governor — who called Trump a threat to American democracy throughout last year’s campaign — has been trying to navigate a tenuous relationship with the White House as the state recovers from the devastating Los Angeles wildfires in January. He’s requested $40 billion in federal aid.
Newsom, while progressive, has never been locked into one ideological position: He’s broken at times with more liberal factions in the Legislature. His shift this time may be to head off the kind of criticism Republicans have aimed at former Vice President Kamala Harris, also of California, or edge toward positions more closely in line with public opinion. According to AP VoteCast, 55% of voters nationwide in the 2024 election said support for transgender rights in government and society has gone too far.
During the podcast episodes released so far, Newsom has been mostly affable and agreeable, though he’s challenged his guests at times. This is not the tart-tongued Newsom who appeared in a 2023 televised debate with Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whom he described as weak and pathetic, or who called the state legislature into special session last year to attempt to safeguard the state’s progressive policies under a Trump administration.
In an age of rigid partisanship, talking with the other side is “so rarely a part of public discourse it seems like either bravery or lunacy,” said Thad Kousser, a political science professor at the University of California, San Diego. “While there are clear risks, he is trying to align his national reputation … in a slightly unpredictable middle.”
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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