Trump, Tariff
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Associated Press News |
President Donald Trump is placing steep new tariffs on virtually all U.S. trading partners, stoking fears of rising prices for consumers and deepening trade wars.
Reuters |
The so-called indicative list of products encompasses around 27% of British imports of U.S.-origin goods, based on 2024 data, according to a government consultation document.
The New York Times |
Experts say the levies will result in higher prices and lower economic growth — and potentially even a recession.
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12mon MSN
Trump said tariffs will force other countries to lower their own rates on U.S. goods and services. But other nations are planning to retaliate.
The Trump administration's aggressive global tariff regime against imported goods from some of its closest allies has drawn strong reactions across the board.
42mon MSN
Financial markets around the world are reeling following President Donald Trump’s latest and most severe volley of tariffs, and the U.S. stock market is taking the worst of it so far.
The global tariffs Trump announced this week include remote territories like Heard and McDonald Islands in the Indian Ocean that don't actually have human populations. Here's what to know about them.
Trump announced sweeping reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trade partners, a move that will likely impact several industries.
President Donald Trump, posting Thursday morning on Truth Social, touted his sweeping new tariffs as a cure for the American economy that will spark resilience and "make America great again."
Apple lost more than $250 billion in market value Thursday, with shares down as much as 8.5% as a result of President Donald Trump’s tariff spree.
Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., denounced tariffs as “bad policy” and “a tax on everyday working Americans,” becoming the latest Republican to break with President Donald Trump’s trade policies a day after he introduced a sweeping tariff package that sent stocks nosediving and threatened to drive up prices for a long list of consumer goods.
Across the country, companies have been installing giant batteries that help them use more wind and solar power. That’s about to get much harder.
Apple’s costs are about to go way up thanks to tariffs. The biggest question facing the world’s most valuable company now is whether to make customers pay for it - or investors. It’s a question with no easy answers -- as evidenced by Apple’s share-price wipeout Thursday.
For years, China’s southern neighbor was a popular alternative for companies trying to avoid the crossfire of U.S. trade tensions with Beijing.