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By Howard Schneider WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Recent national and global surveys of business executives have highlighted the U.S.
President Donald Trump's administration says higher rates will go into effect Aug. 1. Here's where trade negotiations stand.
The Trump administration initially announced the global tariffs on April 2 before opting to pause he bulk of the levies a ...
President Donald Trump unveiled a wave of letters again threatening key trading partners with high tariff rates even as he ...
U.S. President Donald Trump's latest tariff delay provided some hope to major trade partners Japan, South Korea and the ...
Many countries thought they were negotiating in good faith. The White House renewed its “reciprocal” tariff plan anyway, ...
President Donald Trump revealed new higher tariff rates for more than a dozen countries after hitting Japan and South Korea ...
Trump and his aides have repeatedly shifted their stance on tariffs since the president’s “Liberation Day” announcement.
President Trump says he's not extending his latest deadline for higher tariffs beyond Aug. 1, when he's warned new countries will pay higher rates.
The Yale Budget Lab noted that the letters sent Monday would hike the effective tariff rate on U.S. consumers to the highest ...
President Donald Trump sent letters to 14 countries Monday outlining higher tariffs they’ll face if they don’t make trade ...
5hon MSN
President Donald Trump sent out a flurry of letters to U.S. trading partners threatening to raise their tariffs on Aug. 1 if ...
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