PLASTICS Economic Analysis: How 2025 Trade Shifts Are Reshaping U.S. Plastics Imports

Washington, D.C. — The Plastics Industry Association (PLASTICS) Chief Economist, Dr. Perc Pineda, has released a new economic analysis examining how recent trade data and shifting tariff policies are redrawing the map for U.S. plastics imports in 2025, with impacts varying widely by product category and global supplier.

Dr. Pineda explains, “Taken together, the trade developments of 2025 underscore a central reality for the U.S. plastics industry: tariff impacts are uneven, highly product-specific, and deeply influenced by evolving bilateral negotiations. While higher tariffs have constrained imports from some key partners, others have seen stable or even rising trade flows as rates were revised or exemptions applied. For an industry that relies on globally integrated supply chains, understanding where tariff pressures are binding remains essential. As negotiations continue and policies continue to evolve, firms will continue to be challenged to maintain competitiveness in an uncertain global trade environment. Still, businesses can find comfort in the fact that cost-prohibitive import rates cannot sustain economic growth—hence, the resolution of tariff issues may ultimately emerge.”

Click here to read the full analysis on the PLASTICS blog.


About the Plastics Industry Association

The Plastics Industry Association (PLASTICS) supports the entire plastics supply chain, including Equipment Suppliers, Material Suppliers, Processors, and Recyclers, representing over one million workers in our $551 billion U.S. industry. PLASTICS advances the priorities of our members who are dedicated to investing in technologies that improve capabilities and advances in recycling and sustainability and providing essential products that allow for the protection and safety of our lives. Since 1937, PLASTICS has been working to make its members, and the eighth largest U.S. manufacturing industry, more globally competitive while supporting circularity through educational initiatives, industry-leading insights and events, convening opportunities and policy advocacy, including the largest plastics trade show in the Americas, NPE: The Plastics Show.