
US Tariff Revenue Hits $29B Monthly as Consumer Discretionary Earnings Fall to Pandemic Lows
The United States is now collecting $29 billion per month in tariff revenue — a figure that would have been politically unimaginable five years ago. But the mechanics of where that money actually comes from are reshaping the consumer economy in ways that markets are only beginning to fully absorb. As of April 2026, the federal government is generating that monthly figure through a layered and legally contested architecture of trade duties — one that has survived a Supreme Court ruling, been reconstructed under new statutory authority, and expanded into sectors ranging from steel to semiconductors to patented pharmaceuticals. Recent analysis by J.P. Morgan highlights a growing crisis in consumer discretionary earnings, which have plummeted to levels not seen since the 2020 pandemic era as companies struggle to absorb or pass on these mounting import duties. The immediate implications are stark: goods inflation is resurging even as the service economy begins to stabilize. The Legal Architecture Behind the Revenue Understanding the $29 billion monthly figure requires a brief chronology of the legal scaffolding holding it in place. President Trump imposed tariffs on nearly all trading partners under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). On February 20, 2026, the Supreme













































