Donald Trump, tariff and trade performance
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Al Jazeera on MSNAs Trump’s August 1 deadline looms, tariffs are here to say, experts sayTrump’s protectionist moves likely to keep pushing countries to lessen their reliance on the US, analysts say.
Donald Trump is planning a 'world tariff' rate for nearly 200 countries that do not have separate trade deals with the US.
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Behind closed doors, there is anxiety. A delegation of U.S. negotiators is expected to land in New Delhi by mid-August, a timeline that overshoots Trump’s deadline.
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Agence France-Presse on MSNState of play in Trump's tariffs, threats and delaysDozens of economies including India, Canada and Mexico face threats of higher tariffs Friday if they fail to strike deals with Washington. - Global tariffs - US "reciprocal" tariffs -- imposed under legally contentious emergency powers -- are due to jump from 10 percent to various steeper levels for a list of dozens of economies come August 1,
India's equity benchmarks inched lower on Tuesday amid caution over a delay in an interim trade deal with the United States, sustained foreign outflows and weak earnings.
Advising retail investors to remain cautious about the India-US trade deal euphoria, Avinash Gorakshkar, SEBI-registered fundamental market analyst, said, "The India-US trade deal is about ensuring the interest of the two economies.
On Monday morning, Trump said the baseline tariff rate for the world will be “in the range of 15 to 20% ... probably one of those two numbers.” “We’re going to be setting a tariff for essentially the rest of the world,
President Donald Trump on Monday used his luxury golf course on Scotland’s southeastern coast to host British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, mixing critical discussions on the deepening food crisis in Gaza,