Trump, tariffs
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Flexport founder and CEO Ryan Petersen is making a bullish case that U.S. importers will eventually recover duties paid under tariffs now ruled unconstitutional, and he’s built a free tool to help businesses find out exactly how much they may be owed.
Plus a chaotic AI Impact Summit wraps up in India and Anthropic accuses Chinese rivals of using Claude's answers to train their own models
In a much-anticipated decision, the US Supreme Court has ruled that most of the president's tariffs are unconstitutional because of how he implemented them. But the administration has a backup plan.In a political setback for President Donald Trump,
The decision is a major setback for President Trump, who responded by imposing a 10 percent global tariff after lashing out at the justices who ruled against him. Trade deals his administration has struck with countries around the world are now in question.
On Friday, President Trump signed a proclamation that would impose 10% tariffs on most foreign imports to the United States.
Washington retains formidable tools of pressure, but deploying them will require more consensus, more procedure, and more time. Beijing, for its part, gains a modest tactical advantage but not a strategic reprieve.
While most industry stakeholders expect tariffs to be inflationary, economists tell The Builder’s Daily that there is still a lot of uncertainty, which makes predicting tariff impacts difficult. The Center for American Progress, a progressive think ...
Feb 24 - President Donald Trump's temporary 15% tariffs to replace those struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court are meant to resolve a problem that many economists say does not exist: a U.S. balance of payments crisis,
Tariffs can play multiple roles: they have traditionally been used as instruments of trade policy, and the Trump administration has increasingly employed them as foreign policy tools to extract concessions from other countries. Although tariffs have seldom ...