Residents of South Jersey and the rest of the U.S. may soon pay more for coffee, clothing and more under new tariffs announced this week by Trump.
Trump unveiled the new tariffs in a ceremony at the White House’s Rose Garden on Wednesday for a "Make America Wealthy Again" event.
WASHINGTON—President Trump promised a new American golden age. But the immediate fallout from his expansive tariffs has been a shuddering stock market and rising fears of a recession.The dark economic picture that emerged Thursday triggered alarm among some Trump allies and Republican strategists,
President Donald Trump has said his new tariffs, which start rolling out Saturday, will bring in enough money to "make America wealthy again." "We're going to start being smart and we're going to start being very wealthy again,
President Trump finally announced his long-awaited “Liberation Day” tariff plan: a new 10% minimum tax on all goods entering the United States from overseas plus much-larger-than-expected “reciprocal” levies on imports from major trading partners such as China (34%),
Klarna has paused plans to launch a long-awaited $15bn New York IPO because of market turbulence in the US in the wake of President Donald Trump’s wide-ranging tariffs announcements.
President Trump says his new tariffs will grow the U.S. economy. But how much will this growth plan cost you? What you need to know.
Trump first slapped a 10% blanket tariff on all imports into the U.S., including from uninhabited islands, such as the Heard and McDonald islands, and on places with which the U.S. runs a surplus, such as the U.
The surprisingly expansive levies on imports will open up a future of high prices. This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.
The non-partisan Tax Foundation did the math on President Trump's new tariffs: Families are facing an extra $2,100 in taxes this year. Those tariffs are also proving to be a real buzzkill for one Twin Cities brewery.