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13 votes
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US President Donald Trump threatens 50% tariffs on EU and 25% penalties on Apple as his trade war intensifies
25 votes -
US, China agree to lower most tariffs for ninety days amid trade talks
15 votes -
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney calls for snap election amid trade war with US
24 votes -
Danish grocery chain to distinguish European from US goods
11 votes -
Trade wars and how nations fight them - tariffs, subsidies and the risks of trade warfare
6 votes -
Regarding the tariff wars that US President Donald Trump is launching against Canada and Mexico
sorry for dumb question but here it goes: I remember during the first administration, Trump launched some tariffs against us and if I recall correctly, it resulted in the signing of the USMCA...
sorry for dumb question but here it goes: I remember during the first administration, Trump launched some tariffs against us and if I recall correctly, it resulted in the signing of the USMCA which replaced NAFTA.
So, where I get lost is, are these agreements non-binding? Like a country can just choose not to follow them and face no consequences before they expire? Cause I'd assume that what the U.S. is doing breaks the conditions of the USMCA?
and if it's non-binding, then that means that even if another agreement is signed yet again, if Trump wants to throw a new tantrum halfway through his presidency and do tariff wars again, there's nothing stopping him and we'd have to come up with and sign a brand new agreement yet again?
14 votes -
China bans export of critical minerals to US as trade tensions escalate
30 votes -
US Trade Representative investigation concludes that France's Digital Services Tax discriminates against US companies, proposes retaliatory tariffs of up to 100% on French products
7 votes -
US hits Scotch whisky, Italian cheese, French wine, and other European products with 25% tariffs
12 votes -
Uncertainty about US President Donald Trump's trade war with China and Brexit are creating a "flying blind" economy
5 votes -
US President Donald Trump says he's raising tariffs on China after its retaliation
9 votes -
Imported cheese prices are about to double due to proposed US tariffs
12 votes -
Donald Trump says US will hit Mexico with tariffs on all goods, starting at 5% on June 10 and increasing monthly up to 25%
19 votes -
US President Donald Trump’s trade war threat poses problems for China and investors
6 votes -
These products show how hard it’ll be to beat China in a trade war
8 votes -
The end of cheap shipping from China - The White House wants to put an end to low-cost shipping from overseas
15 votes -
US President Donald Trump's China trade war isn't a 'new Cold War'
8 votes -
China announces retaliatory tariffs on $60 billion in US goods
13 votes -
Chinese state oil major suspends US oil imports amid trade war
9 votes -
Donald Trump administration plans to help US farmers hurt by global trade tensions
4 votes -
US President Donald Trump's trade offensive is producing brutal local headlines
9 votes -
The futility of trade war explained by economist Michael Pettis
6 votes -
China vows firm and forcefull retaliation for $200 Billion US tariff threat
11 votes -
Canada tariffs on US goods from ketchup to lawn mowers begin
24 votes -
In Louisiana, Donald Trump's trade war spooks America's biggest port
5 votes -
EU to impose tariffs on $3.2 billion of US goods starting Friday
5 votes -
G7 allies likely to ‘gang up’ on US President Donald Trump as aluminium tariffs threaten all-out trade war
6 votes -
Are trade wars good (and for whom)?
Recent news has made it plain that President Trump intends on going through with his much discussed plan of implementing tariffs on many sources of steel and aluminum imports to the US. This seem...
Recent news has made it plain that President Trump intends on going through with his much discussed plan of implementing tariffs on many sources of steel and aluminum imports to the US. This seem as good a time as any to ask a question that begs for evidence: Are trade wars good, and who benefits?
There is good reporting out there that analyzes the likely impact of this particular steel tariff, so feel free to find it and use it in your own argument (there are figures the administration has produced and figures that other studies have produced using the same source material). There are also plenty of other tariffs out there throughout history that have been studied and discussed. Because these sources can sometimes conflict, please be aware that your choice of what sources to use may need to be justified.
16 votes -
US tariffs a dangerous game, says EU
15 votes -
Trade tariffs: Chorus of condemnation intensifies. Massive US tariffs have come into force as condemnation of the Donald Trump administration's move intensifies.
8 votes -
EU, Mexico, and Canada impose retaliatory tariffs in response to the US
8 votes -
US President Donald Trump hits Canada, Mexico, EU with steel and aluminum tariffs
19 votes -
China slams US President Donald Trump's ‘flip-flop’ on tariffs as trade spat worsens
12 votes