资讯
Liberation Day” came and went, with President Donald Trump’s sweeping new tariffs battering markets, unsettling the global order, and prompting businesses and households to reconsider their spending.
By Emily Green, Cassandra Garrison, Stephen Eisenhammer MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexican officials are scrambling to come up with a plan to increase the amount of water the country sends to the United ...
Follow here for live updates and news on fallout in the financial markets from President Donald Trump's announcement last ...
On Wednesday, President Trump unveiled new tariffs on imports to the US which will form a central part of his government's ...
A number of sweeping new tariffs on goods from other countries are already here — and more took effect on Wednesday.
We broke down the list of some common household goods whose costs might rise due to the Trump tariffs, starting with the ...
President Trump’s sweeping new tariffs, including up to 104% on Chinese goods, have taken effect. The measures impact nearly ...
Despite rattled financial markets, threats of retaliation and some of President Donald Trump’s biggest supporters encouraging ...
Trade Partnership Worldwide, a group of economists and trade policy consultants, has released data on how much importers could pay in each state for 2025.
The president's global raft of tariffs was dubbed "worse than the worst-case scenario" by experts, with Elon Musk reportedly ...
Goods that are compliant with the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade deal, signed into law by Trump in 2018, will be exempt from new tariffs. Those not compliant with the trade deal are already subject to a new ...
A few carmakers have closed factories, laid off workers or shifted production in response to the auto tariffs that took ...
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