제조업 위기: 워싱턴 세금 압박 경고

2025.10.01 16:50

제조업 위기 워싱턴 세금 압박 경고

WASHINGTON STATE BUSINESS CHALLENGES ON THE RISE 🌐📉 Washington’s business leaders, particularly Kris Johnson from Association of Washington Business (AWB), have sounded a critical alarm regarding current policies impacting manufacturing growth in their region. During his speech at Terminal 46 on Wednesday afternoon, President John spoke directly to port and industry influencers about the severe risks posed by tariffs, taxes, and regulatory burdens imposed both federally and state-wide 🛠️📉 The goal set forth—to double Washington’s manufacturing capacity by 2030 through bipartisan effort remains ambitious yet attainable. However, recent legislative actions including substantial tax hikes have cast shadows over this objective despite ongoing challenges from tariffs affecting exports 📈⚖️ Industry examples highlight the financial strain: a local tree service anticipates an additional $40K burden; engineering firms foresee yearly increases ranging between $300k to $400k due to these new taxes. Agricultural enterprises report escalating costs in cold storage and logistics, while restaurant owners cite rising operational expenses pushing some towards closure 🌱🍔❄️ The impact extends beyond finances—72% of AWB members face repercussions from tariffs alone; market contractions are widespread with nearly a quarter experiencing shrinking export opportunities. Investment delays have become commonplace among affected firms 📊📉 Join us in supporting sustainable manufacturing growth by sharing your thoughts below! How do we balance fiscal needs without compromising industry vitality? Let’s spark dialogue and explore solutions together 💬✨

#비즈니스리더경고 #관세영향력


WASHINGTON STATE —The leader of theAssociation of Washington Businesswarned lawmakers in both Washington, D.C., and Olympia that they are putting the region at risk through tariffs, taxes, and regulations.

AWB President Kris Johnson said during the “State of Manufacturing” speech on Wednesday afternoon at Terminal 46, he addressed Port and Business leaders and, indirectly, federal and state officials.

What is the state of manufacturing in Washington? To be painfully blunt, it’s at risk,” said Johnson. “If we want to meet the bipartisan goal the State Legislature set to double manufacturing in Washington by 2030, we need to change course and fast. We can’t afford to give up on this goal; we need to double down on it.

Johnson noted that the state recently passed a slew of new taxes to offset a multi-billion-dollar shortfall at a time when the manufacturing industry is grappling with new tariffs and slowing exports.

A tree-service company expects to pay $40,000 more under the new budget,” said Johnson. “An engineering and technology company estimates it will pay an additional $300,000 to $400,000 per year, and an agricultural employer expects higher costs across cold storage and warehousing. Restaurant operators warn that rising wages, real estate taxes, and now this tax package are forcing closures, and the Tax Foundation ranks Washington as the sixth-worst state for business taxes. These labels matter.

He claims 72% percent of AWB members have reported impacts from the real or proposed tariffs from the Trump administration.

“Lost markets,” Johnson continued. “One in four said export markets are shrinking. One in five reported cancelled orders, Delayed investment. More than a third are putting off capital projects. Nearly one in five are delaying hiring, and some are even planning layoffs.”

Microsoft President Brad Smithhad previously expressed concern about the state’s business climate and has recently gone through a series of layoffs since the Governor signed the package of tax increases.The event on the waterfront marked the first day of AWB’s ninth-annual Manufacturing Week bus tour that showcases manufacturers across the state.

트위터 공유: 제조업 위기 워싱턴 세금 압박 경고

제조업 위기 워싱턴 세금 압박 경고