Former Federal Reserve bosses Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen just told the Supreme Court to throw out most of Trump’s global 0 they didn’t hold 1 a sharp, 600-word amicus brief filed last Friday, they called the tariffs economically meaningless and legally 2 were joined by nearly 50 other economists who spanned the political divide, including Greg Mankiw, Jason Furman, and Douglas 3 group told the court that Trump’s trade war was built on false ideas about how the global economy works. “Trade deficits aren’t some rare threat. They’re just part of how the world trades,” they 4 even if you wanted to fix them with tariffs, the group added, “the reciprocal tariffs do not ‘deal with’ the trade deficits.” Instead, these moves would ripple through the economy with “trillions of dollars’ worth of impact,” hurting every state, household, and industry in the country.
“This is Economics 101,” they wrote, “but the implications are profound.” Economists slam tariffs ahead of Nov. 5 Supreme Court hearing The Supreme Court will hear arguments on November 5 about whether Trump’s tariffs were even legal in the first 5 team claimed they had authority under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which lets the president use certain tools when there’s a national emergency related to foreign policy or economic 6 the economists said this law was being twisted far beyond what Congress 7 case started when a group of 8 challenged the tariffs in the trade court, and they actually 9 decision was upheld on 10 it’s at the highest court in the 11 everyone’s chiming 12 the economists, 31 former federal judges, ex-military officials, and foreign policy experts filed briefs backing the 13 economists mocked the logic behind the tariffs, pointing out that America has always had imbalances in some sectors, like 14 their words:- “The United States has long run banana trade deficits because the climate in the United States is not good for banana farming,” they 15 also quoted Nobel Prize winner Robert Solow, who once said he has a trade deficit with his barber, “who doesn’t buy a darned thing from me.” White House defends Trump’s use of emergency powers In its own filing on September 19, the Trump administration doubled down, saying the tariffs were needed to “rectify America’s country-killing trade deficits.” The White House warned that without tariffs, the country would become poor, and with tariffs, it would thrive.
“To the president, these cases present a stark choice: With tariffs, we are a rich nation; without tariffs, we are a poor nation,” the brief 16 groups also backed 17 American Center for Law and Justice said the president was the “sole organ” in foreign policy and warned the courts not to interfere. “When federal courts second-guess presidential determinations about international emergencies and economic threats,” they said, “they undermine the constitutional framework that has governed our Republic for over two centuries.” But the pressure isn’t just 18 and trading partners have been rattled for years as Trump used tariff threats as bargaining 19 cabinet went so far as to tell a federal court in August that reversing the tariffs would cause a major diplomatic 20 Secretary Scott Bessent warned it could trigger a “dangerous diplomatic embarrassment.” Get $50 free to trade crypto when you sign up to Bybit now
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