Restrictions on international economic flows—like Trump’s tariffs—seem to be obviously bad. But politically speaking, that isn’t always the case.
Companies can avoid having their products subject to tariffs by switching manufacturing to a different country.
Stores selling Russian products have spread across China, and now Moscow is seizing on the interest with a plan for a major ...
Chinese authorities released five local employees of U.S. consulting firm Mintz Group, two years after they were arrested at ...
President Donald Trump's implementations and threats of tariffs have created stock market instability, driving talk of a possible recession. We asked Jana Grittersová, a UCR economist and associate ...
The US wants steep fines on Chinese vessels to revive domestic shipbuilding, but the economy, from farmers to ocean carriers, ...
They blame a once-obscure trade provision, called de minimis, which has been thrust into the spotlight in recent months.
How long tariffs stay in place — and how much relief the federal government provides in the meantime — could decide the fate of some Kentucky farmers.
Ryan Felsman, chief economist at CommSec, said he expects the annual growth rate of the headline consumer inflation indicator to be steady at 2.5%, with annual trimmed mean inflation unchanged at 2.8% ...
NVIDIA, at $118.53, is undervalued considering its AI infrastructure dominance, doubling revenue, and a net income margin of ...
Following a petition from five national labor unions seeking an investigation into China’s policies and practices aimed at dominating the ...