Despite Trump’s ‘Deals,’ Trade War Is Still On
Digest more
Progress on US-China trade over the weekend sent stocks soaring on Monday. Some top commentators say tariffs are still a big risk.
The agreement between the US and China to roll back their respective tariffs for 90 days has led to renewed optimism that the worst of America’s trade wars is over. I’m not seeing the “breakthrough”: There’s still plenty of scope for economic damage that the Federal Reserve will struggle to contain.
The landmark agreement will see an end to 25 per cent tariffs on steel and cars, and concessions for American food
Journal Editorial Report: Trump strikes a deal with the United Kingdom. Officials in rural Texas are accused of paying campaign worker who told elderly people how to vote: docs How much cash to keep in your checking account, according to money experts Archeologists think they solved a 4,500-year-old Stonehenge mystery
In pausing his big reciprocal tariffs on most nations last month, President Donald Trump said countries were clamoring to negotiate trade deals. The Republican president finally landed one of ...
Despite last week’s rumor-fueled rally, trade deals take years to make ... Editorial content from our Expert contributors is intended to be information for the general public and not ...
We don’t have to make a deal with them.” So what’s the holdup more generally? We asked Scott Lincicome, a trade expert at the libertarian Cato Institute and frequent critic of Trump’s tariffs.
While some believe Trump’s post praising both India and Pakistan indicates that the US views New Delhi on par with Islamabad, others disagree, citing the vast economic difference between the two neighbours.
“The White House needs trade deals done quick with a negotiation path established with China otherwise the markets, 10-year yield, USD, Gold, and the economy will head down their own divergent ...
The agreement will slash Trump’s tariffs that he announced on “Liberation Day,” specifically seeing tolls on British cars down from 27.5 percent to 10 percent and eliminating tariffs on steel and aluminum.
Donald Trump and Sir Keir Starmer hailed a “historic” US-UK trade deal which will see tariffs slashed on cars from the UK and more US beef exports to Britain. The US president stressed that Britain and America had struck the first trade agreement since his “Liberation Day” wave of tariffs which have caused economic carnage around the world.