This study investigates U.S. public concern over tariffs during the initial three months of Donald Trump's second term. By analyzing state-level Google search frequency for the topic ‘tariff’, it explores whether tariff-related anxiety was uniformly distributed across states or influenced by political affiliation. The data reveal widespread political polarization: states that supported Kamala Harris exhibited significantly higher search intensity compared to states that supported Trump. These findings suggest that voters in Harris-leaning states were more alarmed by the potential economic consequences of Trump's trade policies, highlighting both the politicization of trade policy and its varying resonance across the political spectrum.
Donadelli, M., Gerotto, L., Who is Googling Trump’s tariffs—And why that matters, <<ECONOMICS LETTERS>>, 2025; 255 (N/A): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.1016/j.econlet.2025.112513] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/320356]
Who is Googling Trump’s tariffs—And why that matters
Gerotto, Luca
Ultimo
2025
Abstract
This study investigates U.S. public concern over tariffs during the initial three months of Donald Trump's second term. By analyzing state-level Google search frequency for the topic ‘tariff’, it explores whether tariff-related anxiety was uniformly distributed across states or influenced by political affiliation. The data reveal widespread political polarization: states that supported Kamala Harris exhibited significantly higher search intensity compared to states that supported Trump. These findings suggest that voters in Harris-leaning states were more alarmed by the potential economic consequences of Trump's trade policies, highlighting both the politicization of trade policy and its varying resonance across the political spectrum.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



