Trump, Tariff
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
Harvard Business Review |
On April 2, President Trump followed through on campaign promises to steeply hike tariffs on U.S. trading partners, taking the average effective tariff rate to around 23%, a near 10-fold increase of t...
Reuters |
Beijing increased its tariffs on U.S. imports to 125% on Friday, hitting back against U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to hike duties on Chinese goods and raising the stakes in a trade war that ...
Yahoo |
The global economy is here to stay, with or without us.
Read more on News Digest
Most of the nations where Trump has properties are seeking negotiated settlements rather than retaliating against the U.S.
Trump says pharmaceutical tariffs are coming ‘very shortly.’ How will this impact the price of drugs? - ‘We're going to be announcing very shortly a major tariff on pharmaceuticals. And when they hear that,
In the usually steady government bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury has risen to about 4.5 percent from less than 4 percent at the end of last week.
As the scope of an impending tariff war begins to take shape, local business owners in Austin fear the potential consequences for their businesses.
The global impact of the tariffs imposed by the United States has started to show. This is evident from the recent drop in the stock markets worldwide. In the tech world, one of the major concerns is the potential increase in iPhone prices.
Sweeping tariffs on imports imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump and countermeasures could have a "catastrophic" impact on developing countries, hitting even harder than foreign aid cuts, the director of the United Nations trade agency said on Friday.
The world's two largest economies appear locked in a tit-for-tat tariff escalation as Beijing announces a massive new levy on US imports. Markets continue to be rattled amid the global economic uncertainty.
El Mundo on MSN21h
The 'every man for himself' of the global steel industry facing Trump: "Tariffs threaten to flood Europe with foreign products, disaster is assured"Washington's barriers will push exporting countries with much lower production costs than their European competitors to redirect their production towards the European market. The United States is the country that imports the most steel in the world.