US President Donald Trump had threatened 60% tariffs on Chinese goods on his campaign trail.
Markets were cautiously optmistic after Trump took a lighter approach to China on Monday. That sentiment lasted a day.
As President Trump entered his second term, the trade war he started with China and which former President Biden kept in place suggests taming the deficit to
China has strengthened trade with Latin America at the expense of the U.S. But Donald Trump, who threatens to raise tariffs on Mexico, could upend those ties.
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump pledged Tuesday (Jan 21) to hit the European Union with tariffs, adding that a 10 per cent duty on Chinese imports could also come as soon as Feb 1. Trump, who wa
President Donald Trump said in an Oval Office signing ceremony Monday evening that his administration will impose 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada on February 1, an extraordinary change in North American trade policy that could raise prices for American consumers.
President Claudia Sheinbaum is detaining more migrants, seizing more fentanyl and positioning her country as a key ally against China. But the U.S. stance has shifted, too.
The president said he planned to put tariffs on America’s neighbors on Feb. 1, as he signed an executive order mandating a sweeping review of U.S. trade policy.
Trade battles being threatened by President Trump would spike food prices, help China and risk key U.S. economic relationships, Mexico’s former trade chief said Monday “I say bring it
Trump threatened tariffs of as much as 60% on China during his campaign but has tempered his plans. Canada and Mexico are now being threatened with a 25% tariff.
Mexico is planning to establish a “task force” to involve US companies in the process of reducing imports from China, the country’s economy minister told a group of auto suppliers at a private meeting Friday in Detroit.