A new tariff on imported medication
8 min
•Apr 3, 202616 days agoSummary
President Trump signed an executive order imposing new tariffs on imported medications (up to 100%) with exceptions for drugmakers making U.S. pricing deals or building domestic facilities. The episode also covered March job growth of 178,000 with a 4.3% unemployment rate, and featured a segment on Moment Motors, an Austin-based company converting classic cars to electric powertrains.
Insights
- Drug tariffs include strategic carve-outs for companies willing to negotiate pricing or invest in U.S. manufacturing, creating incentives for domestic production
- Metal tariff reforms aim to close loopholes by assessing levies on full product value rather than just metal content, addressing artificial pricing schemes
- Job market shows volatility with inconsistent monthly data due to reduced statistical agency budgets and broader economic disruption across sectors
- Long-term unemployment rising 300,000 year-over-year signals structural weakness despite headline job gains in a 'low hire, low fire' environment
- Classic car electrification represents a preservation strategy, allowing vintage vehicles to remain functional and driven rather than deteriorating in storage
Trends
Tariff policy increasingly used as leverage to incentivize domestic manufacturing and pricing negotiations in pharmaceutical sectorMetal tariff restructuring reflects government focus on closing import valuation loopholes and combating systematic underpricingJob market volatility driven by sector shifts and statistical collection challenges, indicating underlying economic disruptionRising long-term unemployment despite positive headline job numbers suggests bifurcated labor market with structural challengesElectric vehicle conversion of classic cars emerging as viable preservation and sustainability business modelTrade deal carve-outs (UK, EU) creating tiered tariff structures based on bilateral agreements rather than uniform rates
Topics
Pharmaceutical Import TariffsDrug Pricing NegotiationsSteel and Aluminum TariffsCopper Tariff CollectionDomestic Manufacturing IncentivesTrade Deal ExceptionsJob Market StatisticsUnemployment Rate TrendsLong-Term UnemploymentLabor Market VolatilityStatistical Data QualityClassic Car ElectrificationElectric Vehicle ConversionAutomotive PreservationModular Electric Drivetrains
Companies
Moment Motors
Austin-based company specializing in converting vintage cars to electric powertrains, featured in Business Envy segment
People
Mark Davis
Discussed classic car-to-electric conversion business model and preservation philosophy in Business Envy interview
Julia Coronado
Analyzed March job report, unemployment trends, and labor market volatility in guest interview segment
David Brancaccio
Co-host of episode and featured interviewer in Business Envy segment on classic car electrification
Sir Ben Asher
Co-host introducing episode on tariffs and job market data
Quotes
"The new tariffs on patented drugs come with lots of exceptions. Drugmakers that reach pricing deals with the Trump administration or are at minimum building manufacturing facilities in the U.S. can avoid the levies or pay only 20%."
Novasafo•Early in episode
"We are in what we call a low hire, low fire environment. So, for those people who do lose their jobs, it's increasingly difficult to secure a new position. And that's not a sign of strength."
Julia Coronado•Job market analysis
"What we're doing is we're piecing together automotive technology from the most modern suppliers we can work with. And we are creating a drive train that fits into these classic cars."
Mark Davis•Business Envy segment
"If you went back into the 60s and found some Mercedes engineers and said, hey, we've got this amazing electric power plant, you know, 370 foot-pounds of torque and 300 horsepower, do you want to use it? Every single one of them would have raised their hand and said, absolutely."
Mark Davis•Business Envy segment
"These cars, if they are not taken care of, end up in people's garages and then barns and then, you know, sitting rotting away. And this allows them to be driven and experienced, you know, anytime and anywhere."
Mark Davis•Business Envy segment
Full Transcript