News

In Donald Trump's world, deficits are always bad and surpluses are always good. In isolation, it's an easy concept to sell to ...
If you’re a large department store or a grocery chain, rest relatively easy — not so much smaller vendors sourcing a lot from ...
The single most expensive product in many homes — a car — is almost certainly not from China. In fact, it’s nearly impossible ...
The UAE could emerge as one of the biggest beneficiaries of the ongoing trade tensions between the US and China, according to experts. As the US imposes steep tariffs on Chinese goods, businesses and ...
Compartés reports that the U.S. chocolate industry is in turmoil with new tariffs to disrupt supply chains and increase costs, and both manufacturers and retailers are feeling the squeeze.
BERLIN -- US President Donald Trump's push for sweeping tariffs to shrink trade deficits is misguided and ignores America's substantial surplus in services, said Hermann Simon, a prominent German ...
Protesters gather during a rally outside the White House in Washington, D.C., the United States, April 19, 2025. (Xinhua/Hu ...
Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” on April 2, 2025, marked the formal launch of sweeping global tariffs, capping months of escalatory announcements since returning to office. Amplifying the economic ...
Financial markets are highly volatile due to global trade wars and erratic policies, prompting a shift to safer assets like ...
“When elephants fight, the mice scamper.” When super powers clash, smaller nations must take cover.
In a globalised world, are tariffs truly shaping the future of trade, or is a deeper transformation already under way?
The US runs a huge surplus in services, which helps explain why they weren't subject to President Donald Trump's tariffs.