On Feb. 1, President Donald Trump announced tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China. By Feb. 3, the tariffs threatened on Mexico and Canada were deferred for a month, while those on China stayed in place.
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee said persistent, outsize tariffs could renew supply-chain ...
Such duties would likely raise expenses for imported home-building materials, hiking construction costs and increasing home prices, some experts said. Meanwhile, they added, potential price increases ...
More sanctions could push Moscow over the edge and serve as a deterrent to Beijing.
On February 1, 2025, the Trump Administration imposed long-expected tariffs on imports from Canada, Mexico, and China through the issuance of ...
The “cult of Bismarck” in Germany is instructive on the cultural basis of Trump’s tariffs and, relatedly, cultural nationalism devoid of an economic rationale.
The main one is that he made the U.S. the biggest loser.
The Chinese president’s failure to build a robust consumer class gives him fewer choices in a rematch with Trump.
Southeast Asia's unique cultural, climatic, and energy resource advantages may offer unexpected resilience in the face of ...
Call it the trade war that wasn’t. On Monday morning, the world awoke to the news that President Donald Trump was bringing ...
Rowdy, Mexican flag-draped protesters in Phoenix and Los Angeles are turning anti-Trump activists into the president's best friends.
The key details of the three Executive Orders are as follows: ...