The fallout continues after President Donald Trump's unveiling of severe tariffs against virtually all U.S. trading partners.
There’s a lot going on. So we asked economists, investment researchers and other experts to help make sense of what’s next.
Trump outlined sweeping plans on Wednesday to apply a minimum 10% tariff on imports to the U.S., with higher rates applied to China and European Union members. China hit back Friday with a 34% ...
In his most expansive trade action to date, US president Donald Trump's imposed 10% "baseline" tariff on most import ...
Donald Trump imposed a 25% tariff on foreign-made cars as part of his economic plan to "supercharge" the US economy.
For the billions of people who still live in poverty, the path to prosperity may look very different than it has since World ...
Former World Bank Chief Economist Kaushik Basu analyzes the impact of US reciprocal tariffs on India, stating it will have a ...
In response to NBR's proposals, economist M Masrur Reaz, chairman of Policy Exchange Bangladesh, said it is necessary to understand what the US expects from Bangladesh and which products they are ...
If the Daiwa Institute of Research (DIR) is correct, Trump’s trade war will reduce Japan’s real GDP this year by 0.6% from ...
Chinese companies that shifted operations to South-East Asia to save costs while getting around Trump tariffs during his ...
The sell-off in corporate bonds since Wednesday, when Trump took US tariffs to their highest level in over a century, ...
“Trade wars are no good for anybody," said Old Dominion University Economics Professor Dr. Vinod Agarwal. "Other countries will retaliate. Almost every country in the world will retaliate unless they ...