Yes that's the point. Making foreign goods more expensive means that the price of said goods increases, incentivizing domestic goods. The ideal scenario is one in which foreign products are largely unviable.
Which is understandable from a protective stance, but the harsh reality we saw was government tariffs making it so it was just cheap enough for purchases to continue which increased government income at the time.
Yes that's the point. Making foreign goods more expensive means that the price of said goods increases, incentivizing domestic goods. The ideal scenario is one in which foreign products are largely unviable.
Which is understandable from a protective stance, but the harsh reality we saw was government tariffs making it so it was just cheap enough for purchases to continue which increased government income at the time.
That's because elastic demand is very real for most goods. Which isn't necessarily a bad thing either.
Fair enough