UK
Sarah Butler
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2025/jan/26/trump-tariffs-businesses-global-worldwide
Last time Trump was in office, London’s Savile
Row became a target for his administration’s tariffs.
In October 2019, every bespoke suit sold to the
US from the UK was slapped with a 25% tax – part of a list of products targeted
with duties in retaliation for the EU giving subsidies to plane-maker Airbus.
The tariffs were in place until 2021, well into the Covid pandemic, by which
time tailors, and many other businesses, were struggling with a host of other
issues.
Huntsman, a Savile Row tailor established in 1879
and an inspiration for the Kingsman films, with an outlet in New York as well
as London, chose not to pass on the cost of the duty to its clients.
Sales did not drop, according to Taj Phull, the
firm’s managing director. “We had to absorb it so it didn’t reflect on to our
customer,” he said. “It had an impact on operating profit in New York.”
The business was partly protected by the ease of
travel between New York and London before the pandemic, when US visitors to the
UK were able to claim back VAT on goods they took home and “customers wanted
the shopping experience of Savile Row”, Phull said.
“We are a destination not an impulsive buy when
you need a suit,” he added. “It is thought-through process for a lot of
customers, whether an aspirational product someone has saved for, or a
longstanding customer.”
Back in 2019, however, sales to the US were only
about a quarter of the tailor’s business. Now they account for more like 40%,
so such a tariff would have more of an impact.
Phull is nevertheless hopeful that the industry
is not in Trump’s sights as a target for future tariff hits. “It was a weird
thing when the Airbus tariff came out,” he said. “And I don’t see it being
brought up again.”
Savile
Row in firing line as US tariffs hit the UK
18 October
2019
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-50043349
Dearbail
Jordan
Business
reporter
Sean Dixon,
co-founder of Richard James, says the Savile Row tailor feels "a bit like
collateral damage".
He and the
other bespoke tailoring firms who line the world-famous London street feel
bruised because, from Friday, every suit they sell to the US faces a new export
tax of 25%.
They are on
a list of products the US is targeting with tariffs in retaliation for the EU
giving illegal subsidies to plane-maker Airbus.
And it has
left Savile Row reeling.
"I
don't think anybody on the street was aware of [the tariff]," says James
Sleater, founder and director of Savile Row's newest tailor, Cad & the
Dandy, whose clients include British rapper Stormzy and rugby player Mike
Tindall.
"Conversations
about Airbus and [US President Donald] Trump and Savile Row are not normally
three words that go hand in hand," he says.
The street
has had little time to prepare for the tariff, which almost doubles the tax on
an exported suit from roughly 13% to 25%.
On 2
October, the World Trade Organisation (WTO) gave the US permission to impose
taxes on $7.5bn (£5.8bn) of goods it imports from the EU.
It was the
latest chapter in a long-running battle between Washington and Brussels over
illegal subsidies given to planemakers Airbus and rival Boeing.
That same
day, the US published the list of EU products that would face the new taxes,
including men's woollen suits made in the UK, as well as cashmere knitwear and
Scotch whisky - and told businesses the tariffs would come into force on 18
October.
The tariffs
come at a crucial time for the UK, which is preparing to leave the EU and
strike trade deals with other nations, including the US.
International
Trade Secretary Liz Truss says: "Resorting to tit-for-tat tariffs is not
in any country's best interests and we are in regular contact with the Trump
administration, urging them to refrain from resorting to such measures.
"As
well as causing temporary disruption to UK businesses, it would also hit
American consumers in the pocket."
Important
market
Kathryn
Sargent, Savile Row's first female master tailor, is concerned that her clients
in the US, who make up a third of her business, may not be aware of the new
tax.
She travels
to cities such as New York, Chicago and Washington DC three times a year to
visit customers, show them fabrics and do fittings for her suits, which start
at about £5,500.
"It is
a conversation that I'll be having with my clients when I'm over there, to
sense what their reaction is and to see if it puts them off placing future
orders," she says.
North
America is an important market for Savile Row, as well as the wider British
luxury industry.
Mr Sleater
reckons that total sales of the street's goods into the US total some £40m.
The US is
also the second largest export market, behind Europe, for UK luxury products,
according to Walpole, the trade body for the British luxury sector, and
Frontier Economics.
But it is
not just the business connection between the two countries that is important to
Savile Row's tailors.
"All
the past US presidents have had garments made in Savile Row," says Ms
Sargent. "When you think of all the Hollywood greats like Fred Astaire and
Cary Grant, there is a beautiful relationship between Savile Row and America,
so this tariff really hits us hard."
She hopes
that her US clients' "love of British quality craftsmanship" will
overcome any concerns about the added cost of buying a Savile Row suit.
Small
bespoke tailoring firms like Ms Sargent's will not be able to absorb the cost
of the tax.
Mr Dixon
says that Richard James, one of the few Savile Row tailors with a store in the
US, says it will do its best to absorb the cost: "But we think there will
be a price… we will have to pass some of this on to our customers."
'Affluent'
Arguably,
the type of people who have a bespoke suit made by a Savile Row tailor are not
short of a pound or two.
"The
customer base is fairly affluent," admits Mr Dixon, whose clients include
actor Benedict Cumberbatch, footballer David Beckham and rapper P Diddy.
"Nevertheless, an increase is an increase and we pride ourselves on people
getting value for money, especially for a Savile Row suit.
"The
amount of man-hours that go into it, the incredible fabrics used and a suit
that can last 20 years or 30 years and then to have a big part of that being
paid in tax. I don't know how people are going to feel about that."
While Savile
Row's tailors were shocked by the tariffs, Walpole was not.
"We're
disappointed, of course," says Helen Brocklebank, Walpole's chief
executive. "But we're not surprised that suiting and textiles and fine
fabrics came so heavily top of the list."
She says
that UK luxury goods such as cashmere sweaters have often been targeted by the
US in trade tussles.
In 1999,
when Bill Clinton was in the White House, Scottish cashmere sweaters faced
sanctions following a WTO ruling in a row between the US and the UK about
bananas.
But Ms
Brocklebank does not think this latest round of tariffs will have a major
impact on sales of UK luxury goods.
"You
have quite a weak pound at the moment and the number of US visitors coming to
the UK to shop for these kinds of goods is at an all-time high, so I don't
think that the impact is going to be enormous," she says.
Big win?
President
Trump, who reportedly favours suits made by Italy's Brioni, described the WTO
ruling at the beginning of October as a "big win" for the US.
But his
jubilation - and any pain felt by UK businesses - may be short-lived.
Ms
Brocklebank points out that next spring, the WTO will rule on Boeing, the US
planemaker, which it found had benefited from tax breaks.
The EU could
then be given the green light to enforce its own tariffs on US goods.
Mr Sleater
says that while Cad & the Dandy was caught unaware by the new taxes, Savile
Row should use the opportunity to elevate its brand, which has historically
always been about understatement.
He says that
while Italy's suitmakers - who are not facing US tariffs - have actively
promoted their industry, Savile Row has not.
"The
key thing about this is to stomach the tariffs being placed on us and - I'm
talking about the street here - we somehow need to find a way to make our
clothes even more appealing.
"Never
before has there been such a time when branding is really, really
important."
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