Tanvi Ratna Profile picture
Apr 3, 2025 21 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Trump’s new tariffs aren’t a trade tweak—they’re the first move in a full-spectrum reset.

$9.2T in debt matures in 2025. Inflation lingers. Alliances are shifting.

One announcement just set a dozen wheels in motion.
Here’s what’s really happening—and why it matters 🧵 Image
Start with the debt: $9.2T must be refinanced in 2025.

If rolled into 10-yr bonds, every 1 basis point drop in rates saves approx $1B/year; so a 0.5% drop would save $500B over a decade.

Lower yields free up fiscal room—without them, core spending gets crowded out. Image
How to push yields down with sticky inflation and cautious Fed?

Manufacture uncertainty.
Sweep in with tariffs, spook the markets, trigger risk-off.
Money exits stocks, floods into long-term Treasuries.

A deliberate “detox” to cool the economy and cut refinancing costs. Image
But cheap refinancing isn’t enough on its own. Even at lower rates, the debt remains enormous.

That’s where the next lever comes in: cutting the deficit.

@elonmusk & @DOGE are cutting $4B per day. At that pace, they’d shave off $1 trillion by end of Sep 25 (if not May).
With these savings, the big economic pillar to successfully deliver on @SecScottBessent's 3-3-3 plan is to get growth UP.

Tariffs come in as a trigger for domestic industrial revival. The thinking is: by making imports expensive, you create room for U.S. producers to step in
But here’s the problem: American factories can’t scale up overnight.

So in the short term, consumers will face higher prices.
The administration knows this.

That’s why they’re front-loading the pain now, betting that by 2026, the benefits will be visible.
In the meantime, they’re offering some near-term relief.

Tax cuts have already been floated to help offset the cost burden on households.

And while risky, currency devaluation may follow later to make imports cheaper without lifting tariffs.
Don’t forget: tariffs also bring in revenue.

Estimates suggest they could raise over $700 million within the first year.

That’s not a game-changer on its own, but it gives the Treasury a bit more room to maneuver—especially if paired with deficit cuts. Image
Still, this approach isn’t without risks.

If domestic supply chains can’t catch up, or if global retaliation kicks in, inflation could rise again.

And if that happens, the Fed may be forced to raise rates—which would blow a hole in the low-yield plan. That’s the tightrope.
A common critique is: why impose tariffs before building out the capacity to replace imports?

But that assumes tariffs are the end goal. They’re not.

They’re the starting gun—a way to force movement both inside the U.S. and around the world.
Which brings us to geopolitics.

Before tariffs, Trump’s team signaled a global order reset: pulling back from NATO, cooling EU ties, and opening diplomatic space with Russia, Saudi Arabia, etc.

Tariffs now serve as leverage to renegotiate terms based on America-First policy.
Expect a lot of bilateral deals in the coming months.

Tariffs will be lowered for countries that offer strategic concessions—on trade, security, or industrial policy.

Those that resist? They'll pay higher costs until they decide to come to the table.
China is the focal point.

Observers have long argued: China isn’t a poor country.
It’s a wealthy, high-capacity state that floods markets with exports its currency artificially low.

Tariffs could be used to force big moves like currency appreciation by China.
Lines will be redrawn with other allies too.

Europe may be pushed to cut exposure to China or negotiate on Ukraine.
India may be forced to cut tarriffs and move closer to U.S. alignment.
Mexico and Canada could face demands to crack down on fentanyl trafficking routes.
In the US economy there will be clear winners and losers.

Steel, autos, and textiles are likely to benefit—industries that form Trump’s political base.

But tech, retail, and construction—sectors more reliant on imports—could take a hit, especially in swing states.
That’s the political gamble.

If jobs return fast enough in key states, and inflation remains under control, the tariffs may look like a bold but effective move.

But if prices spike and job creation lags, the strategy could backfire by November 2026.
The Wisconsin seat loss was a warning

Less than 18 months to show results for midterms.
Voters don’t respond to strategems—they respond to prices, jobs and narratives.

FDR had fireside chats, Reagan had Morning in America
Trump needs a similar consistent messaging to Americans
So here’s the big picture:

→ Lower yields ease the debt wall
→ Spending cuts restore fiscal discipline
→ Tariffs jumpstart domestic growth
→ And geopolitics gets rewritten in America’s favor

It’s disruption by design—with enormous stakes.
If it works, it’s a defining success:
→ Debt under control
→ Manufacturing reborn
→ Global leverage restored
→ Trumpism vindicated in 2026

If it fails:
→ Inflation
→ Retaliation
→ Lost midterms
→ Strategic drift

18 months to find out if the gamble pays off.
I’ve spent a decade working at the intersection of geopolitics, economics, and technology.

If you found this insightful, follow me here on X & Substack for sharp, no-fluff breakdowns of the forces shaping our world.

tanviratna.substack.com/p/trumps-tarif…
Thanks to a few folks who asked me for pts of clarification:
- A 0.5% drop in 10-year Treasury yields will save about $50 billion in interest payments over 10 years, not $500 billion, per Sec Bessent's rate of $1 billion saving per basis point.
- Currency devaluation could likely be considered after tariffs are renegotiated to make American exports cheaper (not imports). In the current churn, the dollar will appreciate against other currencies, possibly offsetting import price rises. For example, in the 2018-2019 China tariffs, a 17.9% effective tariff increase was partially offset by a 13.7% renminbi depreciation, reducing the net price impact to 4.1%.

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More from @tanvi_ratna

Apr 8
The ceasefire with Iran is barely 12 hours old and already disputed on every front.

I pulled the exact answers from today’s White House (Karoline Leavitt) + Pentagon (Pete Hegseth) briefings on the biggest points of confusion 🧵 Image
1. Does the ceasefire cover Lebanon/Hezbollah?

Leavitt: “Lebanon is not part of this ceasefire. That has been relayed to all parties.” Netanyahu supports the deal and will remain a “helpful partner.” Future inclusion? “Will continue to be discussed.”
2. Is the Strait of Hormuz actually open?

Leavitt: Iranian state media claims are “completely unacceptable.” White House sees “an uptick of traffic today.” Ceasefire is “subject to” immediate, safe reopening with no limitations. Monitoring “minute by minute.”
Read 6 tweets
Apr 1
Bab el-Mandeb Strait, the emerging front in the Iran war, connects directly to

-Minneapolis Op Metro Surge by ICE
-Ilhan Omar
-Minnesota Medicare fraud
-Harder targeting and stance of UAE by Iran

I said Iran links to almost every theater of movement by Team Trump—let’s see this oneImage
A chokepoint between Red Sea & Gulf of Aden, impacting Middle East, Africa & Europe—where Houthis operate

Houthi coast = launch point for attacks
Djibouti/Eritrea = gateway to Suez
UAE/Saudi ports = energy/logistics exposure
Somalia coast = smuggling + piracy Image
Somalia is the internationally recognized state; Somaliland operates as a self-declared, de facto independent region in the north

Two key ports sit on this split
—Bosaso (Somalia, capital Mogadishu), and
—Berbera (Somaliland)

forming parallel nodes to the Yemen/Houthis corridor along the same corridor
Read 12 tweets
Mar 29
It has been interesting to see the sudden positioning of Pakistan amidst the crisis.

Today it hosts foreign ministers from Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt in Islamabad for ceasefire talks.

To many wondering why it is mediating, and not India or Oman? Here's what I see 🧵
Pakistan shares a long border with Iran. That gives it practical leverage on Strait of Hormuz shipping, potential refugee flows, and spillover risks.

It’s not a Gulf state under direct attack, so both Washington and Tehran see it as a usable channel.
Army Chief Asim Munir has Trump's ear (multiple calls).
PM Sharif & FM Dar speak regularly with Iran's Pezeshkian.

Akin to India and Oman, it's another player both sides actually pick up the phone for.
Read 7 tweets
Mar 2
Everyone is debating escalation after the Iran strikes. Missiles, retaliation, regime survival. But almost no one is asking the question serious strategists ask first.

Why did this happen NOW?

The answer lies in a full systems transition in US foreign policy. Image
The strike makes less sense as Middle East crisis management and more sense inside a shift underway in US national security thinking. Washington increasingly treats economic systems themselves as security assets that must be defended.
Energy flows, semiconductor inputs, shipping corridors, data infrastructure. These are no longer commercial questions. They determine industrial capacity, inflation stability, and technological leadership. Security policy has quietly merged with economic policy.
Read 16 tweets
Feb 19
My 48 hrs on the ground for @FoxNews at the #IndiaAIImpactSummit2026

What’s unfolding here is far more significant than stated

- Indian tech has officially arrived on the global AI stage
- Along with a US-India full stack AI partnership with profound global implications
🧵 Image
Senior leaders are present from 50+ countries .

But in tech, only two stories are visibly dominant:
- India’s rapid indigenous AI buildout
- embedded American tech partnerships across the stack

Despite being the "alternative" to American AI, there are ZERO Chinese firms Image
India's DeepSeek moment happened 2 days ago - 1st fully homegrown multimodal, multilingual LLM by @SarvamAI beat Gemini, GPT at India-specific tasks. Their event drew more attendees than the Paris AI Summit!

Indian moonshots tackling everything from compute to LLMs are rising.
Read 15 tweets
Jan 31
The gold and silver crash wasn’t a coordinated plot by Wall Street or governments.

Kevin Warsh wasn’t the cause — just the match.

As Ray Dalio warned, capital wars are here — and we likely just witnessed one.

The sequence matters. I’ll walk through it 🧵 Image
For decades, global finance ran on one quiet habit:

Japan lent money for free.

Borrow yen at ~0%.
Buy anything else.
Keep the spread.

Hedge funds, pensions, commodities — trillions leaned on this.

Japan was the rich grandmother who never asked for it back.
On Jan 20, that changed.

PM Sanae pushed for fiscal expansion to help the Japanese middle class & strengthen defence.

Long-term yields on the yen jumped.

Cheap yen stopped being cheap.

Suddenly savers could earn real returns & Japan's capital started returning home.
Read 8 tweets

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