Trump says he won’t impose tariffs
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A new study from the Kiel Institute for the World Economy found that Americans bore 96 percent of the costs incurred by President Trump’s tariffs last year. The study, which analyzed shipment-level data covering over 25 million transactions,
Taiwan will provide credit guarantees of at least $250 billion for additional investment by its companies in the U.S. ・Taiwanese companies that build new chip capacity in the U.S. will be permitted to import up to 2.
Better tax, regulatory, and monetary policy should indeed provide a tailwind for manufacturing, but the sector will probably continue to struggle.
Politicians talk a lot about tariffs, and much of what they say boils down to a simple question: Who pays? President Trump has insisted repeatedly that foreign countries will foot the bill for American tariffs.
For years, President Donald Trump has insisted that tariffs imposed by his administration punish foreign producers rather than American consumers. A major new economic study released this week directly challenges that claim, concluding that US businesses and households have paid nearly the entire cost of Trump’s trade policy.
Tariffs were supposed to be the rare policy that tackled two problems at once, slowing imports while throwing off enough cash to help tame the federal debt. Instead, the latest customs figures show revenue slipping just as President Donald Trump leans ...
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Trump has tariffs. Europe has a ‘trade bazooka.’ This Greenland standoff could get ugly, fast
President Donald Trump threatened Saturday to impose new 10% tariffs on imports from several European countries. It could unravel months of progress made during trade negotiations settled after Trump’s trade war last year.
One of the biggest complaints employers have had since Trump’s April “Liberation Day” tariff announcement has been the uncertainty created by the tariffs’ ever-changing details. And with the Supreme Court set to rule on litigation brought by small ...
Fact Check: German troops left Greenland after short, pre-planned mission, not due to tariffs threat
German soldiers left Greenland after a short, pre-planned mission, contrary to online narratives that said they withdrew early because of the U.S. president’s threat to impose tariffs on European allies opposed to his administration's bid to buy the Arctic island.
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