Trump, tariffs and Aid Nippon-US Steel
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President Trump’s top economic advisers stressed on Sunday that they would not be deterred by a recent court decision declaring many of the administration’s tariffs to be illegal, pointing to other authorities the White House could invoke to pressure China and other nations into trade negotiations.
The president's plan - where countries face between 11% to more than 100% tariffs on goods brought into the US - was announced in April. But the majority of the tariffs were paused by Trump for 90 days in the wake of stock market volatility.
Homebuilder stocks rallied on Thursday, in a sign that residential construction will benefit from the ruling striking down Trump's tariffs.
President Trump offered a warning on potential court actions that could interfered with his tariffs on imports. "If the Courts somehow rule against us on Tariffs, which is not expected, that would all
President Trump has a number of options at his disposal to implement tariffs, but none are as broad and aggressive as IEEPA.
President Donald Trump has audaciously claimed virtually unlimited power to bypass Congress and impose sweeping taxes on foreign products.
Fareed asks two seasoned analysts, the Financial Times’ US national editor Edward Luce and the American Enterprise Institute’s Kori Schake, what the future holds for Trump’s tariffs after several important court rulings this week.
4hon MSN
Wells Fargo's Christopher Harvey thinks a 10% tariff could be split evenly between importers, corporations, and consumers.