https://stonemaiergames.com/the-math-of-tariffs/
As others have said, avoid this article. It doesn't add anything meaningful to the discussion.
- OP says 20% to 25% and states specific codes (and links to a government web site)
- the article to linked says 54% and contains no codes or links
Which one is correct?
Correction: Jamie discusses “9504.90.6000” in the second-most recent comment below the post, likely as a response to this exact “no tariff codes, no knowledge” framing. (There could be other instances, I only skimmed briefly for it.)
"The fact is that the tariff for 9504.90.6000–tabletop games–exported from China to the US is 145%."
Which undermines pretty much the entirety of the OP article.
I don’t think people producing games being hobbyists rather than business people is quite the negative I feel this post presents it to be.
So we reward that thinking in reality, of awareness of things, and how to get the goal, and while our board games have complex mechanics and people who live and breathe gameplay and testing, the minutiae of business concepts are eye-glazing afterwords.
How do we bridge that gap; and I'm not only referring to hobbyists. What kind of cognitive disruption gets us to address avidya:
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The "enemy" is avidya, which literally means "un-seeing." Avidya is motivated refusal to engage accurately with actuality.
https://meaningness.substack.com/p/living-beautifully-cuttin...
It's kind of wild to be this smug about a technicality (um ACKCHUALLY it's under THIS code and not THAT one, can't you even read lol) and act like anyone should just be ready for historically high tariffs applied on the whims of an autocrat when you were formerly doing business in one of the most business friendly countries on earth.
People trusted logistical partners to do their job, and it was evidently misplaced, but to act like being caught off guard by all that is laziness is cringeworthy. Comes off like they have an axe to grind.
And while the blog post was informative about some nuance of the import situation, the author's tone is annoyingly smug and takes entirely too much pleasure in criticizing others in their industry; it's enough to turn me off of buying anything from them.