India Unlikely to Retaliate Against Trump's Tariffs
Digest more
Top News
Impacts
Yahoo |
US President Donald Trump’s reshaping of the global economy sparked rancor, fear, and threats of retribution from some of the world’s largest economies.
The Boston Globe |
The higher rates are set to be collected beginning Wednesday, ushering in a new era of economic uncertainty with no clear end in sight.
Read more on News Digest
If there was any remaining doubt, the unipolar U.S. moment is over. On January 30 newly installed U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio called time on the country’s three-decade-long run as the sole arbiter of global affairs,
Donald Trump's near-universal tariffs have world leaders scrambling to figure out how best to secure a deal with the US, with White House aides saying the president is open to striking "great deals".
Donald Trump’s long-awaited plan to impose hefty tariffs on America’s trade partners has arrived and some of the world’s most vulnerable economies have been harshly punished.
Emerging economies worldwide are bracing for sliding currencies and a possible deterioration of their sovereign credit after U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs brought levies on U.S. imports to their highest levels in 100 years.
President Trump escalated trade wars with a new set of sweeping tariffs for about 60 countries. During a speech in the Rose Garden, the president declared a national economic emergency as the legal justification for the new tariffs.
Donald Trump is calling it 'Liberation Day' for America, as he is set to launch new sweeping tariffs on April 2nd. However, millions of consumers worldwide are concerned that the U.S. president's plan could cause significant harm with minimal benefit,
The US will be unable to put the genie back in the bottle. Trump’s shocking actions have eroded the trust that has underpinned America’s global leadership, and the damage will be evident long after Trump has left the scene. Having once abdicated its moral authority as the anchor of the free world, who is to say it can’t happen again?
Photo: aap/Reuters President Trump’s high tariffs would make the U.S. one of the world’s most protectionist countries. There are precedents: Countries from India to Argentina have used tariffs ...
The explosion of imports has come with what Trump sees as a glaring downside: massively imbalanced trade between the US and the world, with a goods trade deficit that exceeds $1.2 trillion.
World economies were jittery on Monday ahead of US President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” when he is set to unleash tariffs against multiple
Asian economies bore the brunt of the penalties ... 40% of its exports to the United States in 2022, according to the World Bank. Latin America and many African nations emerged with comparatively ...