Trump, Tariff
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For clean tech companies, trade wars are bad news, particularly when it comes to securing key parts and minerals for use in renewable energy and electric vehicles as supply chains become further disr...
From Forbes
President Donald Trump promised tariffs that would raise U.S. import taxes high enough to mirror what other assess as trade penalties on American goods.
From U.S. News & World Report
His plan, if fully implemented, will return the United States to the highest tariff duty as a share of the economy since the late 1800s, before the invention of the automobile, aspirin, and the incan...
From The Atlantic
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El Mundo on MSN1h
The true impact of Trump's tariffs on Spain: at risk of 27,000 million and a hole of up to three tenths of the GDPFuncas estimates that the impact of the measures could subtract nearly 5,000 million from the GDP. The indirect effects could have an even greater impact. On April 2, the President of the United States,
The US dollar has been falling as President Donald Trump rolls out his tariffs, and it plunged after he unveiled much steeper-than-expected duties on "Liberation Day." That goes against what markets had anticipated before he launched his trade war.
President Donald Trump dramatically hiked tariffs on trade between the United States and other countries, with credit ratings agency Fitch concluding they are now at their highest level since 1910. Speaking to Newsweek Joshua Blank,
After Trump's "Liberation Day" announcement on Wednesday, California is bracing for the impact of the president's new tariffs.
Mr. Trump has said the two new tariffs he unveiled yesterday — a 10% universal duty on all U.S. imports and so-called reciprocal tariffs applied to imports from 90 nations — will revitalize American manufacturing, create jobs and generate federal revenue.
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After several years of consistent mortgage rate increases and soaring home prices, the prognosis for the 2025 housing market seemed promising at the start of the the year. However, recent economic and political instability has cratered consumer confidence and homebuyer optimism.
President Donald Trump’s latest announcement of sweeping tariffs is raising questions about how the move to tax goods imported from other countries will impact consumers.
International trading partners and U.S. consumers alike are watching closely for what President Donald Trump does on April 2, which he has dubbed “Liberation Day.” That’s when the President will announce a sweeping set of reciprocal tariffs—which involve levying taxes on imported goods at the same rate that U.
A 10 per cent tariff on UK imports into America began on Saturday, as president Donald Trump began enacting increased taxes on goods from other countries. The initial 10 per cent “baseline” tariff took effect at US seaports,