Canada, Trump and Tariff
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President Donald Trump’s tariffs could have an unintended side effect: making homeownership even less affordable for many Americans.
Canadian businesses see less chance of a worst-case tariffs scenario but remain cautious and are keeping hiring and investment under check, the Bank of Canada said in a regular quarterly survey on Monday.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will keep working toward a new trade framework with the United States despite U.S.
Canada will reduce the amount of foreign steel that importers can bring in tariff-free, a move to help domestic producers suffering from US President Donald Trump’s levies on the sector.
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President Trump on Thursday threatened to impose 35% tariffs on goods from Canada starting next month, hiking import duties on one of the U.S.'s largest trading partners.
The American Automotive Policy Council, which represents the Detroit 3, criticized a deal giving Japan lower import tariffs than the U.S. automakers.
As the EU digs in, President Trump announced two more deals and finalized a third, most notably a pact with Japan. “I just signed the largest deal in history with Japan," Trump
President Donald Trump said Canadian tariffs will take effect on Aug. 1, and state business owners are bracing for the impact.