Oklahoma
OKModerate Impact — 52/100Oklahoma's economy rides on energy and agriculture, both caught in tariff crosscurrents. The state's oil and gas industry — centered in Oklahoma City and Tulsa — faces tariffs on imported steel pipe, drill bits, and specialized equipment that raise extraction costs by an estimated 15-20%. Oklahoma is a major producer of oil field equipment (Baker Hughes, Helmerich & Payne), and while domestic demand benefits from tariffs on competing imports, export markets for this equipment face retaliatory barriers. The state's aerospace sector is surprisingly large: Tinker Air Force Base maintains military aircraft, and American Airlines' massive Tulsa maintenance base is the world's largest commercial aircraft MRO facility, importing parts from worldwide suppliers. Oklahoma wheat, from the state's western plains, faces retaliatory tariffs. The state's cattle industry, spread across 5 million acres of rangeland, sees retaliatory tariffs on beef exports. Oklahoma's tire manufacturing (Bridgestone in Oklahoma City, Michelin in Ardmore) faces higher rubber import costs. The state benefits somewhat from the energy independence narrative that drives tariff policy, but the math of higher equipment costs and retaliatory agricultural losses doesn't add up for most Oklahoma workers.
Impact Score
📊52/100
Moderate Impact
Household Tariff Cost
🏠$1,540
Annual estimated burden
Jobs at Risk
👷28,000
Trade-dependent employment
Exports at Risk
📦$5.0B
Annual export value threatened
🏭 Industry Impact
| Industry | Jobs at Risk | Export Value | Tariff Exposure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oil & Gas | 10,000 | $2.0B | 25% on steel pipe/equipment |
| Aerospace & MRO | 7,000 | $1.2B | 10-25% parts |
| Wheat & Agriculture | 5,000 | $800.0M | Retaliatory 20% |
| Cattle & Beef | 4,000 | $700.0M | Retaliatory 25-38% |
📦 Key Trade Products
↑ Exports
↓ Imports
🏭 Top Exports
Key industries facing trade disruption:
🎯 Retaliation Targets
Products targeted by foreign retaliation:
💡 Did You Know?
- •American Airlines' Tulsa MRO base is the world's largest, maintaining 800+ aircraft with globally-sourced parts
- •Oklahoma's oil field equipment industry benefits from some tariff protections but loses export markets to retaliation
- •Steel pipe tariffs add 15-20% to oil drilling costs in Oklahoma's major basins
- •Oklahoma wheat production spans 4 million acres — retaliatory tariffs threaten the state's second-largest crop
🔄 Similar Trade Profiles
📚 Explore More
See Your Personal Impact
Find out exactly how much tariffs cost your household in Oklahoma based on your income and spending.
Use the Calculator →