Biibliography
1. Trump, Donald J. Remarks on drug pricing at public event, November 2025. Transcript documenting claims of “200–700%” price reductions.
2. Financial Times. “Pharmaceutical Tariffs and Generic Drug Supply Risks.” Analysis of how proposed tariffs could raise drug costs and trigger shortages.
3. Associated Press. “Trump Claims Drug Prices Fell by 1,500 Percent.” Fact-check explaining mathematical impossibility of percentage reductions beyond 100 percent.
4. Council on Foreign Relations. “Who Pays for Tariffs?” Explainer detailing tariff incidence and consumer cost pass-through.
5. Reuters. “Toymaker Says Tariffs Will Cost Millions, Freezes Hiring.” Reporting on Learning Resources’ tariff invoices and business impact.
6. Oyez. Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump. Supreme Court docket and case summary on tariff authority and refund rights.
7. Trump, Donald J. Multiple public statements claiming foreign countries pay U.S. tariffs.
8. Congressional Budget Office. “The Economic Effects of Recent Tariff Increases.” Analysis showing higher inflation and reduced household purchasing power.
9. CBS News. “Italian Pasta Could Double in Price Under Proposed Tariffs.” Consumer-facing explanation of stacked duties.
10. Allrecipes. “Why Shoppers Are Stockpiling Pasta.” Reporting on price anticipation and import exposure.
11. Reuters. “Trump Says Tariffs Could Fund $2,000 Rebates.” Coverage of proposed tariff-funded payments.
12. PBS NewsHour. “Can Tariffs Replace Income Taxes?” Expert analysis showing revenue mismatch and regressive effects.
13. FactCheck.org. “False Claims About Inflation and Prices.” Explanation of inflation rate versus price level confusion.
14. Congressional Budget Office. “Tariffs and Durable Goods Prices.” Identification of appliances and vehicles as highly affected categories.