Trump, tariffs
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Finding it hard to track the latest U.S. trade policy state of play? Here's a look the deals the president has announced and the rates he's so far threatened to impose in letters to global leaders.
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MiBolsilloColombia on MSNHow Trump's Tariffs Will Eventually Impact Your WalletThe recent inflation rise to 2.7% in June, driven by consumer prices, signals potential financial strain. As tariffs take effect, consumers may face increased costs, impacting their purchasing power.
More than 1.7 million Hoosiers voted for President Trump in 2024. How has Trump's second term impacted Indiana?
President Donald Trump has threatened new tariffs on any nation supporting “anti-American” policies of the BRICS group of emerging economies, as he announced tariff letters would be sent out to scores of countries from Monday,
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Raw Story on MSNTrump's 'chaotic' tariff policies are 'beginning to bite': editorialPresident Donald Trump's tariff policies are starting to show up in monthly inflation data, and that could be bad news for his economic policies, according to a new editorial. The Labor Department's latest jobs report showed that hiring slowed in industries that rely on immigrant labor.
Slok said that he “absolutely” believes that inflation has already caused a “lift off” on consumer goods. Data released from the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Tuesday showed that inflation accelerated in June, signaling that Trump’s trade wars are leaving an initial impact on the economy.
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President Donald Trump has managed to make his erratic trade policies even more baffling to countries desperate to negotiate an escape from his wrath.
President Donald Trump threatened to add a 10% tariff rate on BRICS-aligned countries. The term first applied to 4 countries but the group expanded.
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Axios on MSNThe paradox of Trump's tariff policyU.S. trade policy has entered the great in-between, a liminal state in which high tariffs on major trading partners are ostensibly imminent, yet also forever just over the next horizon. Why it matters: The good news for American consumers and businesses is that potential price shocks and other disruptions from an all-out global trade war remain at bay — and Wall Street is taking this confusing landscape in stride.
The White House has been trumpeting the absence of tariff-related price hikes as a sign that the president’s agenda is succeeding.