Rick's Blog

The Tariff Maze: What’s Really Happening

Henry Kelley, co-founder and president of BlueWind Technology and a licensed U.S. customs broker, sat down with We Don’t Color On the Dog to cut through the noise surrounding tariffs.

Customs Broker

Most people have never heard the term “customs broker,” but they play a critical role in keeping commerce moving. Kelley describes the profession as a hybrid of attorney, accountant, and trade expert.

IEEPA Chaos

For the past year, the Trump administration relied heavily on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) of 1977 to impose tariffs—sometimes announcing new rates on a Friday night, effective by Saturday morning.

The Supreme Court ultimately struck down the IEPA tariff mechanism, ruling that Congress never intended the 1977 law to serve as a tariff authority. But don’t expect relief yet. Within two hours of that ruling, the administration issued new orders under Section 122—a statute written in 1930 that was originally designed to address balance of payment issues and has never previously been applied.

Who Actually Pays the Tariff?

Despite the political debate, the law is unambiguous.

While businesses can negotiate cost-sharing arrangements with foreign suppliers, the legal burden falls squarely on U.S. importers—costs that inevitably flow to consumers.

The Hidden Tariff Timing Trick

One of the most eye-opening revelations involves when a tariff is actually triggered. Goods don’t legally “enter” the United States when they come off a ship; they enter when they leave the port. That distinction has fueled a surge of interest in inland ports, including discussions right here in Pensacola.

For Pensacola, this concept could be transformative, expanding effective port capacity without adding physical space, while offering local businesses a strategic tariff buffer.

What’s Coming Next

Kelley expects courts to eventually strike down Section 122, but in the meantime, the administration has launched numerous Section 232 and 301 investigations that could yield new, legally durable tariffs by this summer.

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