Drug Tariffs Are a Sideshow for Big Pharma
Digest more
The Trump administration announced last week it would begin harnessing 25 percent levies on heavy-duty trucks imported into the U.S.
Economists, farmers and agriculture business owners from across the Midwest gathered to discuss the impact of the Trump administration’s changing trade policies.
A majority of Americans — regardless of party affiliation — have made it crystal clear in poll after poll: They’re not on board with President Donald Trump’s tariff-heavy agenda. It’s also an open question as to whether the president is legally able to impose the levies.
13hon MSN
Oil companies slash jobs by the thousands as prices fall, tariffs rise and industry consolidates
President Donald Trump promised boom times for oil and gas when he took office in January. Instead, the industry is cutting jobs.
"The last thing we want to do is just keep raising prices on our guests," Gregory's Coffee founder Gregory Zamfotis said. That might be easier said than done.
Did "all of India's telemarketers" threaten "to go on strike permanently" if the U.S. places increased tariffs on imports from that country? No, that's not true: No media organizations reported that.
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee said the most recent round of tariffs may be causing businesses in his district to again pause decision-making in order to see where the levies settle.
The analyst estimates that the new tariffs will add $1,000 to the cost of a home, excluding upholstered wood products, which Lovallo notes are usually not purchased by builders. But that cost “will be spread throughout the entire housing value chain, with the builders perhaps best positioned to push back on suppliers,” he wrote.