Is this a serious question? I feel like you're just trolling me at this point.
All along you've been insisting that China pays the tariff, making it sound as though you think China "absorbs" that cost and US consumers wouldn't see any difference.
It's what your administration promised in the election campaign. "
Tariff" is the most beautiful word in the dictionary, and tariffs will make America so rich that income tax will be eliminated. Only now the effects are beginning to be felt;
American children will get only two dolls instead of thirty. "And maybe the two dolls will cost a couple bucks more than they would normally,"
This is just more muddying;
Let's stay on the topic of this thread though instead of muddying the waters.
1) If I purchase a drone from the DJI store and DJI (the "importer") ships the drone directly from China to my house in the US, who pays the tariff?
2) If I purchase a drone from the DJI store and DJI (the "importer") ships the drone from a DJI warehouse in the US to my house in the US, who pays the tariff?
In both of those, the US "importer" pays the tariff. The only question is who ultimately "absorbs" that cost.
DJI-America is the importer, and they're not providing that service for free.
If you purchase anything from China to be delivered directly to your house, then YOU are the importer. The package will be intercepted by Customs until YOU pay the tariff.
If DHL, or FedEx, or whoever, is handling the delivery, then THEY are the importer and pay the tariff on your behalf, but you most certainly will receive a bill to pay for that service.
If
DJI-America receives the delivery from China, then
DJI-America is the importer who pays the tariff and similarly bills you for that service.
DHL, or FedEx, most certainly will never "absorb" that cost without passing it on the end consumer.
It is purely a marketing and business decision whether or not DJI-America is subsidized by its parent company DJI-China to soften the blow to their loyal American consumers. But no business is going to survive in the long term if they choose to "absorb" all of the cost of a 145% tariff.
US consumers will feel the pain of these tariffs as consumer prices of imported Chinese products will go up.