HR6888-119

In Committee

Trump Tariff Transparency Act

119th Congress Introduced Dec 18, 2025

Legislative Progress

In Committee
Introduced Committee Passed
Dec 18, 2025

Ms. Pettersen (for herself, Ms. Scholten, and Ms. Stevens) introduced …

Summary

What This Bill Does
The Trump Tariff Transparency Act requires the Small Business Administration (SBA) to publish quarterly reports showing how much tariffs imposed after January 20, 2025, are costing American consumers and small businesses. The SBA must work with the Bureau of Economic Analysis to calculate these costs and make the reports public.

Who Benefits and How
Consumers and small business owners benefit from increased transparency about how tariffs affect their costs. Policy researchers, economists, and journalists gain access to official government data on tariff impacts. The public can use these reports to better understand the economic consequences of trade policy decisions.

Who Bears the Burden and How
The Small Business Administration faces a new reporting requirement, needing to compile and publish quarterly cost analyses. The Bureau of Economic Analysis must provide consultation support for these reports. Both agencies will need to dedicate staff time and resources to produce these reports on an ongoing basis.

Key Provisions
- Requires the SBA Administrator to publish quarterly reports on tariff costs starting within 90 days of enactment
- Reports must show the average aggregate cost of tariffs to consumers and small businesses
- Only applies to tariffs imposed after January 20, 2025
- The final quarterly report each year must include total annual costs
- Uses the official Small Business Act definition for small business concerns

Model: claude-opus-4
Generated: Dec 27, 2025 17:09

Evidence Chain:

This summary is derived from the structured analysis below. See "Detailed Analysis" for per-title beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

Primary Purpose

Requires the Small Business Administration to publish quarterly reports on the aggregate costs of tariffs imposed after January 20, 2025, to consumers and small businesses.

Policy Domains

Trade Small Business Economic Transparency

Legislative Strategy

"Increase transparency around the economic impact of tariff policies implemented after January 20, 2025, by mandating government reporting"

Likely Beneficiaries

  • Consumers seeking tariff cost transparency
  • Small business owners
  • Policy researchers and economists
  • Democratic legislators seeking accountability data

Likely Burden Bearers

  • Small Business Administration (reporting requirement)
  • Bureau of Economic Analysis (consultation requirement)

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Trade Small Business Economic Transparency
Actor Mappings
"the_director"
→ Director of the Bureau of Economic Analysis
"the_administrator"
→ Administrator of the Small Business Administration

Key Definitions

Terms defined in this bill

1 term
"small business concerns" §2

As defined in section 3 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632)

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology