Trump, 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.
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,
On Monday, President Trump signed an executive order extending the pause on many tariffs until August 1. This marks the second postponement of these tariffs, initially deployed by Trump on April 2.
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,
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc was ready to take all "necessary" steps to safeguard its economic interests, after US President Donald Trump announced that he would impose 30% tariffs on all EU goods.
Trump threatens 50% tariffs on Brazil over ex-president trial, despite trade surplus. The U.S. exported more goods to Brazil than it imported, contradicting Trump's usual justification for tariffs.
Trump’s latest threat of higher tariffs to countries including several Asian nations if they don’t make trade deals with the U.S. came just a day before Secretary of State Marco Rubio departed ...