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Tariff Turbulence: What Consumer Goods Companies Need to Know
How leaders will turn tariff risk into strategic advantage.
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How leaders will turn tariff risk into strategic advantage.
Consumer products manufacturers (especially those operating in the US) are navigating a tough mix of pressures, including cautious consumers, flatlining volumes, and stranded Covid-19–era capacity. New tariffs introduce another layer of volatility, at a time when pass-through pricing is harder to execute and quick cost wins are largely exhausted.
The good news: Companies in consumer goods may be less exposed than other sectors. Many have maintained relatively localized supply chains, limiting the direct tariff impact to select inputs such as packaging. But vulnerabilities remain, especially for categories reliant either on agricultural inputs such as coffee, cocoa, or spices, where domestic substitutes are scarce, or on provenance-bound finished goods such as spirits.
The bigger challenge likely lies in what comes next. Beyond tariffs, leaders must prepare for second-order effects such as consumer backlash abroad, a potential recession, shifts in consumer brand perception abroad, and the accelerating shift to a post-global world.
The window for action is now. Tariffs may be the spark. But as with past disruptions, the boldest consumer goods companies will use this moment to strengthen their foundations and reshape how they win. Leaders will move decisively on three fronts:
Act now to mitigate tariff risk
Reshape for what’s next
Power it all through cost