
Nassim Taleb Says Trump's Approach to Tariffs ‘Makes No Sense'
By and Sonali Basak
Save
The Black Swan author Nassim Taleb said President Donald Trump's approach to tariffs will depress US gross domestic product and could soon lead to labor shortages.
Taleb, who's also scientific adviser for hedge fund Universa Investments, said tariffs may be necessary, but they need to be 'symmetric.' Much of the US economy is based on cheap labor and constraining that input will have real knock-on effects, he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Keller Industrial Properties to break ground on facility at Grissom Aeroplex
Keller Logistics Group announced the groundbreaking of a new 150,000-square-foot speculative warehouse at Grissom Aeroplex. Located at S. Innovation Way and West C.R. 800 South in Bunker Hill, the next-generation facility, developed in partnership with ARCO, aims to meet the surging demand for flexible, high-performance industrial space in the Peru-Bunker Hill corridor, according to a press release from ARCO. The warehouse was designed with future-proof capabilities and will feature 36-foot clear heights, multi-tenant rear-load access, and the potential to expand to 200,000 square feet. With six dock positions, three drive-in ramps, 40,000-lb airbag levelers, 800-amp power, and ESFR fire protection, it is engineered to serve a wide range of distribution, manufacturing, and logistics tenants. The ceremonial groundbreaking is set for Saturday, June 28. Completion is slated for late 2025. 'This is more than just a building—it's a long-term investment in the future of Indiana's logistics economy,' said Bryan Keller, president of Keller Industrial Properties. 'As supply chains continue shifting toward regionalized models and faster fulfillment, we're providing the infrastructure that makes those models sustainable and scalable.' The project responds directly to the trends shaping the industrial real estate market across the Midwest. According to CBRE's Q4 2024 Midwest Industrial Market Report, over 37 million square feet of industrial space was under construction across the region, with net absorption reaching 5.7 million square feet, driven by strong occupier demand and an evolving e-commerce landscape. 'The Peru-Bunker Hill corridor is one of Indiana's most compelling growth areas for logistics and manufacturing,' said Austin Brasher, vice president at ARCO. 'This project positions Keller and future tenants at the heart of that growth, offering proximity to major markets without the operational constraints of urban cores.' Local and regional leaders joined Keller and ARCO at the ceremonial groundbreaking, underscoring the project's broader economic impact. 'This development brings jobs, investment, and visibility to the region, aligning perfectly with our long-term economic goals,' said Jim Tidd, Economic Development Director with the Miami County Economic Development Authority. The project team also includes Curran Architecture of Indianapolis, which provided architectural design and renderings for the facility. The press release said the warehouse will be strategically located within a high-visibility logistics corridor, sitting near key interstates and freight corridors, enabling efficient access to regional and national markets while offering the labor force infrastructure and incentives critical to modern supply chain operations.


CNN
8 minutes ago
- CNN
Vance refers to Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla as ‘José' while defending Trump's use of National Guard in LA
Vice President JD Vance on Friday took a swipe at Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla, whom he incorrectly called 'José Padilla,' and defended the Trump administration's controversial use of the California National Guard in Los Angeles. 'I was hoping José Padilla would be here to ask a question, but unfortunately, guess he decided not to show up because there wasn't the theater, and that's all it is,' Vance told reporters, speaking from an FBI mobile command center that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is currently using in Los Angeles. Vance dismissed Padilla's appearance last week at Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's press conference as 'pure political theater.' Padilla was forcefully removed, ordered to the ground by law enforcement and placed in handcuffs after attempting to ask Noem a question. Padilla, California's first Latino elected to the US Senate, had interrupted Noem as she was giving remarks in the Los Angeles FBI headquarters on the Trump administration's response to protests in that city against Noem's department and its immigration-enforcement efforts. When asked about the vice president calling the senator by the wrong first name, Vance's spokesperson Taylor Van Kirk brushed it off, telling CNN, 'He must have mixed up two people who have broken the law.' Padilla's communications director Tess Oswald wrote on X, 'As a former colleague of Senator Padilla, the Vice President knows better. He should be more focused on demilitarizing our city than taking cheap shots. Another unserious comment from an unserious administration.' California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom also called Vance out on X, saying it was 'not an accident.' On Friday, Vance also reacted to a federal appeals court allowing President Donald Trump to maintain control over thousands of California National Guardsmen. 'That determination was legitimate, and the president's going to do it again if he has to, but hopefully it won't be necessary,' Vance said. The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals late Thursday granted a request from Trump to lift, for now, a lower-court ruling that had required the president to relinquish control of roughly 4,000 guardsmen from the Golden State that he had federalized to beef up security in Los Angeles amid unrest over immigration enforcement. 'And I think what the Ninth Circuit said very clearly is when the president makes a determination, you've got to send in certain federal officials to protect people,' Vance said, while lashing out at California's Democratic leadership for their handling of the unrest. The vice president also defended the administration's immigration policy, saying Trump wants to prioritize deportations of violent offenders or 'really bad guys,' but that no one who's undocumented should feel immune from enforcement. When asked whether the administration's deportation tactics had gone too far, Vance argued that he didn't think 'we've been too aggressive.' 'Anytime we make a mistake we correct that very quickly,' Vance said.


Washington Post
11 minutes ago
- Washington Post
US evacuates 79 staff and family from embassy in Israel as more Americans ask how to leave
WASHINGTON — The U.S. evacuated 79 staff and families from the U.S. Embassy in Israel on Friday as the conflict between Israel and Iran intensifies and growing numbers of private American citizens seek information on how to leave Israel and Iran. An internal State Department memo says the military flight, the second known to have occurred this week, left Tel Aviv for Sofia, Bulgaria, where some or all of the passengers were to get a connecting charter flight to Washington. The document, which was obtained by The Associated Press, also said that more than 6,400 U.S. citizens in Israel had filled out an online form on Friday alone asking for information about when and if the U.S. government would organize evacuation flights. An additional 3,265 people, some of whom may also have competed the form, called an emergency number seeking assistance. The document estimated that between 300 and 500 people per day could need evacuation assistance should the U.S. decide to offer flights or ships to get Americans out, as the U.S. ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, has said is being considered. There are some 700,000 Americans in Israel, many of them dual nationals, according to estimates, although the exact number at any given time is unclear because U.S. citizens are not required to notify the embassy if they are there or when they might leave. Earlier Friday, before the memo was distributed, State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce told reporters that more than 25,000 Americans had reached out for information on leaving Israel, the West Bank and Iran. She told reporters that those people had sought 'information and support' and were 'seeking guidance' on departing. She would not give a breakdown of where the queries had come from and would not comment on embassy evacuations. In Iran, the document said that at least 84 U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents, or Green Card holders, had crossed into neighboring Azerbaijan by land since the conflict began and that an additional 774 had been granted permission to enter as of Friday. Nearly 200 American citizens and Green Card holders are awaiting permission to travel overland from Iran to neighboring Turkmenistan, it said.