- Small manufacturers are facing mounting uncertainty as shifting tariff policies, legal rulings, and potential refunds complicate planning and investment decisions.
- Despite a Supreme Court ruling invalidating key tariffs, businesses may wait on up to $175B in refunds while navigating new proposed import taxes.
- Construction and manufacturing sectors are seeing slowed growth, with tariffs—especially on steel—adding pressure to an already strained outlook.
A wave of tariff changes, legal reversals, and new trade proposals is creating instability for US manufacturers, with smaller firms feeling the pressure most acutely, according to Globe St.
Policy In Flux
Tariffs introduced in 2025 have already generated more than $130B in federal revenue, despite being struck down by the Supreme Court earlier this year. Now, uncertainty persists as policymakers weigh refunds that could total as much as $175B.
Complicating matters, a new executive action proposes a temporary 10% tax on imports, alongside additional trade restrictions under investigation. The evolving policy landscape has left businesses unsure how long current rules will last—or what comes next.
Small Businesses, Big Decisions
For smaller manufacturers, the stakes are particularly high. Limited capital and tighter margins make it harder to absorb rising costs or pivot supply chains.
One equipment manufacturer, for example, would need to invest tens of millions of dollars to shift production domestically—an expensive gamble given the risk that policies could shift again. In the meantime, companies are cutting staff, raising prices, and delaying expansion plans, reflecting a broader trend where earlier manufacturing momentum is now giving way to a more pronounced slowdown in output and demand.
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Construction Feels The Strain
The ripple effects are hitting construction and industrial sectors, where tariffs on materials like steel remain in place. Industry groups point to growing pressure from supply chain disruptions, labor shortages, and geopolitical risks.
Forecasts reflect that strain: nonresidential construction growth is expected to remain modest over the next two years, while spending on manufacturing facilities is projected to decline after recent gains.
Why It Matters
Tariff volatility is emerging as a key drag on business confidence. For developers, manufacturers, and investors, unpredictable trade policy makes long-term planning more difficult—potentially slowing capital deployment across sectors.
What’s Next
While some areas like data center construction continue to expand rapidly, broader industry growth will depend heavily on policy clarity. Until then, smaller manufacturers remain in a holding pattern, balancing immediate cost pressures against an uncertain regulatory future.



