The Tariff Shock: From 41% to 72% in One Year
The 2026 Thomson Reuters Global Trade Report, based on responses from 225 senior trade professionals across North America, the EU, the UK, Latin America, and Asia Pacific, reveals a trade landscape undergoing fundamental transformation. The headline finding: 72% of trade professionals now identify U.S. tariff volatility as the most impactful regulatory change, a dramatic leap from just 41% the previous year—a 31 percentage point increase.
This surge in concern is no accident. Over the past year, the U.S. has implemented new tariff measures affecting a broad range of products, from steel and aluminum to consumer electronics, automotive components, and agricultural goods. More significantly, 76% of respondents believe these tariffs represent a permanent approach to trade policy rather than a short-term negotiating tactic. This assessment means companies can no longer afford a wait-and-see approach—tariffs must be treated as a permanent feature of the business environment.
Supply Chain Elevated to Top Strategic Priority
The report shows that 68% of trade professionals now cite supply chain management as their top strategic concern—nearly double the 35% who identified it as a priority just one year ago. As one respondent noted: “Supply chain reliability is back on the radar in a big way.” The focus has shifted from inventory optimization to systemic resilience building.
This elevation reflects a deeper trend: supply chain management is graduating from an operational function to a boardroom-level strategic imperative. When tariff volatility can instantly alter a product’s cost structure and competitive positioning, supply chain agility becomes a survival capability. The report specifically highlights that trade departments are transforming from cost centers into strategic business partners.
The Cost Cascade: From Raw Materials to End Markets
Tariff impacts cascade through the entire value chain:
- Upstream: Imported raw material and component costs rise sharply, directly increasing production inputs
- Midstream: Manufacturing margins face severe compression, forcing difficult trade-offs between profitability and market share
- Downstream: Export competitiveness declines as higher costs translate into price disadvantages in international markets
Corporate responses to this cascade have shifted dramatically. 39% of respondents report absorbing or considering absorbing tariff costs rather than passing them to customers—up from just 13% the previous year, a threefold increase. As one professional explained: “Product costs are increasing, and we are faced with either raising prices at the risk of lower sales or absorbing reduced profits.”
Three Strategic Responses Reshaping Global Supply Chains
Companies are implementing comprehensive countermeasures:
- Changing sourcing patterns (65%)—the most common strategy. Companies are actively seeking alternative supply sources, shifting procurement from high-tariff to low-tariff or zero-tariff regions. Southeast Asia, India, and Mexico are emerging as primary beneficiaries
- Renegotiating supplier contracts (57%)—sharing cost pressure with existing suppliers through adjusted pricing terms, extended payment cycles, or volume-based discounts
- Nearshoring or reshoring manufacturing to the U.S. (51%)—more than half of companies are considering moving production closer to home. While this means higher labor costs, it eliminates tariff exposure and shortens supply chains
As one respondent stated: “The financial burden caused by tariffs led us to reorganize our supply chain and production footprint in order to reduce tariff exposure and preserve profitability.” These aren’t minor adjustments—they represent fundamental restructuring of supply chains and production footprints.
Compliance Burden Intensifies Across All Dimensions
Beyond cost impacts, tariff changes have dramatically increased compliance burdens:
- Increased documentation requirements—companies must prepare more detailed trade documentation proving tariff classification and origin
- Stricter tariff classification scrutiny—customs authorities demand greater accuracy in HS code classification, with misclassification carrying steep penalties
- Enhanced rules of origin verification—accurately tracing product origin across complex global supply chains becomes increasingly difficult and critical
- More frequent physical inspections—imported goods face more checks, adding time and uncertainty to customs clearance
One respondent noted that “project schedules are being impacted by the complexity and delays in regulatory compliance and customs clearance”—highlighting how tariffs increase total operating costs not just through direct duties, but through extended lead times and operational uncertainty.
Outlook: Building Resilience for a Permanent Tariff Era
The Thomson Reuters report delivers a clear message: tariff volatility has evolved from a cyclical disruption into a structural feature of global trade. With 76% of professionals expecting tariffs to persist, companies must elevate tariff management from emergency response to core strategic capability.
Companies that successfully navigate this new reality will share key characteristics:
- Diversified sourcing networks—flexible supplier portfolios not dependent on any single country or region
- Real-time trade intelligence—leveraging AI and analytics to monitor tariff changes and model impacts in real time
- Compliance automation—using technology to reduce compliance costs and improve documentation accuracy
- Supply chain visibility—full visibility across multi-tier supply chains to rapidly identify tariff exposure
This tariff-driven global supply chain restructuring is only beginning. For supply chain leaders, the speed of adaptation will determine competitive positioning in the new trade order.
Source: thomsonreuters.com










