Treasury Secretary Assures Sufficient Funds for Tariff Refunds, Highlights Fraud Crackdown Titelbild

Treasury Secretary Assures Sufficient Funds for Tariff Refunds, Highlights Fraud Crackdown

Treasury Secretary Assures Sufficient Funds for Tariff Refunds, Highlights Fraud Crackdown

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U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent addressed concerns over potential refunds for President Donald Trumps emergency tariffs in a Reuters interview on Friday. He assured that the Treasury holds nearly 774 billion dollars in cash as of Thursday, with projections for an end of March balance around 850 billion dollars, more than enough to cover any court ordered payouts. Bessent doubted the Supreme Court would rule against the tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, calling refunds a corporate boondoggle since companies like Costco likely passed costs to customers without much pass through to consumers. Reuters reports he noted goods inflation stayed below headline inflation, disputing links to broader price rises. The court delayed its tariff decision, but Bessent believes delays favor Trumps position, with refunds possibly spread over weeks, months, or a year if needed.

On Monday, Bessent announced Treasury initiatives to combat government benefits fraud in Minnesota, following detection of Somali fraudsters sending federal support funds overseas. According to Debevoise and Plimpton, these measures aim to strengthen the financial system and protect taxpayers, tying into a new White House backed Division for National Fraud Enforcement at the Justice Department. The Cato Institute raised alarms, with scholar Nicholas Anthony criticizing it as expanding financial surveillance under the Bank Secrecy Act, potentially restricting Americans from sending money abroad.

Meanwhile, Politico reports White House tensions over a Justice Department probe into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, which blindsided aides and rattled bond market expectations. Bessent had prepared for a smooth Fed transition, anticipating Trumps announcement of a replacement before or after Davos, but the feud risks market instability.

Bessent also expects 2025 budget data to show a deficit reduction of 300 to 400 billion dollars from 2024, boosting fiscal capacity. The Denver Gazette echoes his confidence on tariff refunds amid lawsuits from Costco, Kawasaki Motors, Revlon, and others.

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