Democratic Women in Congress Demand Treasury Address Gendered Impact of Trump Tariffs

Rep. Brittany Pettersen (D-Colo.) during a Mother’s Day press conference calling for action on care and reproductive rights on May 8, 2024, in Washington. She is joined by is joined by Reps. Nikema Williams (D-Ga.), second from left, and Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Mass), right. (Jemal Countess / Getty Images for MomsRising)

BREAKING UPDATE: On Wednesday, June 18, the Democratic Women’s Caucus issued a letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urging the Treasury Department to analyze the impact the Trump administration’s tariff policies on women, and address financial inequities immediately, especially the ways escalated tariffs affect women-headed households.

The letter spearheaded by Reps. Brittany Pettersen (Colo.) and Lizzie Fletcher (Texas) highlights various gender-based tariffs—like those on apparel, for example, which make up about three-fourths of all U.S. tariff burdens and disproportionately cost women in the U.S. a collective $2 billion a year more than men. 

Overall, the Trump administration’s tariff policies have already started to drive up everyday costs for Americans, which are hardest for working women and families already struggling to make ends meet. The letter states:

“All mothers deserve to afford basic needs such as groceries and clothing for their children. All women should be able to purchase a coat without worrying the price is higher because of the coat’s gender classification. During these uncertain economic times, we must uplift women and working families, not further financially burden them.”


President Donald Trump takes a question from a reporter during a Cabinet meeting at the White House on April 30, 2025. (Andrew Harnik / Getty Images)

This story was originally published by The Contrarian on May 14, 2025.

President Donald Trump’s trade wars continue to create global turmoil and churn for financial markets. Monday, May 12th’s move—a temporary suspension of his “Liberation Day” bombast and 90-day pause until massive tariffs are fully imposed on China—seemed in part prompted by warnings of a dire toy shortage and the sour reaction to Trump blathering about … dolls. “A young lady, a 10-year-old-girl, 9-year-old girl, 15-year-old-girl, doesn’t need 37 dolls,” he told reporters. “She could be very happy with two or three or four or five.”

Incoherent as it sounds, it so happens that toys geared to girls indeed are among the consumer products most likely to be subject to an upcharge—tariff mania notwithstanding. I have been writing on the phenomenon known as the “pink tax” for the better part of a decade and, yes, from American Girl to Barbie dolls, we are talking ground zero for understanding how pricing inequities proliferate.

Generally, the phrase “pink tax” refers to gender-based pricing—which is nothing less than price gouging. Two federal consumer protection reports document the prevalence of the practice, both issued in 2018 during the first Trump administration: from the U.S. Government Accountability Office, “Gender-Related Price Differences for Goods and Services”; and a study conducted by former U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, “Earn Less, Pay More: The State of the Gender Pay Gap and ‘Pink Tax’ in 2018.”

Among the worst offenders? Toys, bikes and scooters marketed to girls. Toiletries are also a trap: Shampoo marketed to women (think pastels and flowers) can cost nearly 50 percent more than that in containers sporting navy blue packaging; same goes for shaving paraphernalia (razors, cartridges and creams) as well as body lotion and deodorant. California and New York have passed laws to prevent some forms of gender-based price discrimination; attempts to advance a federal Pink Tax Repeal Act, last introduced in 2024, have never garnered traction.

The pink tax is also shorthand for the “tampon tax”—which refers to state sales tax, or more specifically the failure to classify menstrual products as a necessity, medical or otherwise, rendering them ineligible for a sales tax exemption. The result is an extra 6 to 10 cents on the dollar—pennies that add up over four decades or so. Campaigns to ax the tampon tax have been underway for several years and have seen significant bipartisan success. To date, 30 states have done away with the tampon tax, including those with Republican men at the helm, such as Florida and Texas.

Now in the face of Trump’s tariff frenzy, reports indicate we can expect to see yet another version of the pink tax—aka “pink tariffs”—given that women make the vast majority (80 percent) of all consumer purchases.

A woman walks in an aisle of a Walmart in Houston, Texas, on May 15, 2025. (Ronaldo Schemidt / AFP via Getty Images)

It gets more insidious. A U.S. International Trade Commission study found that women shoulder more of the tariff burden for clothing and shoe purchases because specific textile codes assign higher rates for articles designed for women. According to the Progressive Policy Institute, average tariff rates for women’s wear are 16.7 percent compared with 13.6 percent for men’s—adding up to a $2.7 billion gender gap. [And lest you think buying “unisex” is a cost-saving option, according to reporting by The 19th, those items are automatically classified as women’s.]

General principles of regressive taxation apply, which also disparately affect women. Overall, single-parent homes, more than 80 percent of which are led by women, are most vulnerable to tariffs, in part because they spend a high proportion of household income on basic goods. Single mothers are more likely to have low income (with an overall poverty rate of 28 percent). Women are 35 percent more likely to live in poverty and represent two out of three of low-wage workers, meaning they pay a larger share of wages on consumer products and across-the-board price increases due to tariffs just hit harder.

Of course, all of this comes against the backdrop of an administration seemingly hell-bent on getting women to have more babies. Despite its supposed consideration of policies such as a $5,000 cash allotment for new mothers (I wrote about it for The Contrarian), tariffs are now poised to drastically hike prices of child-rearing essentials like car seats and cribs, strollers and sippy cups. In other words, a baby pink tax –in which women are still most likely to be bled dry.

Congress has taken up the issue with reintroduction of the Pink Tariffs Study Act. Championed by U.S. Reps. Lizzie Fletcher and Brittany Pettersen, the bill would require the U.S. Treasury Department to assess gender bias in tariff rates. According to Fletcher: “Now, as President Trump has imposed tariffs and started a trade war … it is even more important that we understand how higher tariffs will raise costs for everyone, and women in particular.”

Indeed. Whether it is the price of baby dolls or the cost of caring for real families, we should not lose sight in the tariff discourse that the system is structured in a way that means women will be the first to feel the financial pain.

About

Jennifer Weiss-Wolf is the executive director of Ms. partnerships and strategy. A lawyer, fierce advocate and frequent writer on issues of gender, feminism and politics in America, Weiss-Wolf has been dubbed the “architect of the U.S. campaign to squash the tampon tax” by Newsweek. She is the author of Periods Gone Public: Taking a Stand for Menstrual Equity, which was lauded by Gloria Steinem as “the beginning of liberation for us all,” and is a contributor to Period: Twelve Voices Tell the Bloody Truth. She is the author of the forthcoming book Generation Menopause: A User’s Manual and Citizen’s Guide (Hachette US-Sheldon Press, 2026). She is also the executive director of the Birnbaum Women’s Leadership Center at NYU Law. Find her on Twitter: @jweisswolf.