Trump, EU and Tariffs
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Dominic Pino is the economics editor and Thomas L. Rhodes fellow at National Review and host of the American Institute for Economic Research podcast “Econception.”
Global markets shrugged off news of Trump's latest tariffs, with both Asia-Pacific and Europe stocks staging a muted response Tuesday.
Donald Trump is betting that tariffs rather than sanctions will fix economic and geopolitical imbalances. But does the threat of rising US inflation and retaliation make sanctions a safer choice?
Trump’s new tariff letters have sent shockwaves across global markets as he targets 22 countries with tough new trade threats just weeks before the August 1 deadline. From close allies like Japan and South Korea to BRICS nations like Brazil and South Africa,
Volkswagen reported a 1.3-billion-euro ($1.5-billion) first-half hit from tariffs and cut its full-year sales and profit margin forecasts in the German carmaker's first assessment of the damage from U.
El Mundo on MSN15d
Trump's extended tariff deadline keeps global trade in limboAfter months of promises to overhaul or eliminate the Federal Emergency Management Agency, President Donald Trump is touting a fast and robust federal response to the devastating Texas floods. One former agency leader says it's "a defining event that
British Columbia’s premier warned that more Canadian counter-tariffs on the US might inflict “severe harm” on his province, while failing to deter President Donald Trump from pursuing his trade war.
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Investing News Network on MSNGlobal Outcry Mounts Over Trump’s Tariff Blitz Ahead of DeadlinePresident Donald Trump’s surprise announcement of 30 percent tariffs on imports from the EU and Mexico has triggered immediate backlash from various stakeholders, with less than three weeks to go before the tariffs take effect on August 1.
Data rolling in on the collection of tariffs by the United States suggests the trade war initiated by President Donald Trump is already generating significant revenue for the U.S. Treasury.