The industry supplies low-cost clothing to the United States is a crucial part of the Asian countries’ economies.
The industry supplies low-cost clothing to the United States is a crucial part of the Asian countries’ economies.
The United States has steered an economic order for 75 years based on trade and trust, making the country the world’s financial superpower. That vision is now blurred.
The company said it would offer customers the same prices it offers its employees on most of its vehicles.
The company counts on the sale of devices for three-quarters of its nearly $400 billion in annual revenue, and it makes almost all of its iPhones, iPads and Macs overseas.
She used her wealth strategically to expand opportunities for women, underwriting the development of the pill and supporting the suffrage movement.
As he announced sweeping tariffs, President Trump claimed there had been a large decline in the price of eggs. That’s not the whole picture.
The combination of lower oil prices and higher costs for essential materials like steel pipe threatens to squeeze domestic oil and gas producers.
European leaders have said they would prefer to negotiate. If that fails, their response could go beyond anything they’ve tried before.
As the center of the global supply chain, Taiwan’s chip companies are expected to face pressure from Washington to invest more in the U.S.
Punishing tariffs on Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and others in the region threaten their position as major manufacturing hubs for the American market.
China vowed countermeasures and the E.U. promised a unified response, while Britain and Japan refrained from immediate retaliation.
Global markets were in a tailspin on Thursday as policymakers and trade partners expressed dismay over president’s latest trade-war salvo.
The Trump administration says sanctions imposed on Moscow mean the U.S. does little trade with Russia, but questions persist about the motivations.
President Trump’s trade war adds another challenge to the incoming government’s attempts to revive Europe’s biggest economy.
Not even America’s closest trading partners were spared by a policy broadside that spooked investors and left policymakers scrambling to formulate responses.
Investors’ shock at the size of the levies sent markets in Asia sharply lower. Experts warned that the global economy could be upended.
In spite of a prolonged charm offensive by Prime Minister Keir Starmer, President Trump said that Britain would be hit with the universal base rate levied on all countries.
The president says “jobs and factories will come roaring back” because of his trade policies, but the
If airlines must refund airfare up to 24 hours after purchase, why not hotels? A traveler finds that even two minutes is too late to cancel a botched reservation at a ski resort.
Japan has refrained from talk of striking back at U.S. tariffs. Trade experts say that is because its inflation-strained economy limits its options.
President Trump says the tariffs will encourage investment in U.S. factories, but analysts say car buyers will have to pay thousands more.
The 34 percent tariff announced on Wednesday is in addition to two rounds of import taxes the president already imposed since January.
The answer appears to begin with the total trade deficit America runs with its trading partners.
In addition to reductions at agency personnel, federal regulators are demanding $2.9 billion in contract cancellations, The Times has learned.
Critics warned that the levies could fuel inflation and slow economic growth, while those who supported the move said it was long overdue.
The facility, in Colstrip, Mont., used a new E.P.A. system for requesting special waivers from President Trump.
President Trump unveiled sweeping tariffs that included so-called reciprocal actions on dozens of other countries at very high levels.
The initial market reaction suggested that the scale of the tariffs on Wednesday had come as a surprise and analysts were still trying to figure out how they had been derived.
He wrote from Europe and Asia, served as a book critic and produced a raft of books, on subjects ranging from the French condition to multiculturalism.
President Trump announced sweeping levies on countries across the world. Washington’s partners have been bracing for the fallout.
It wasn’t the size of human brains that distinguished people from apes, he theorized, but the way they were organized. He found a creative way to prove it.
The Meta chief, who was at the White House on Wednesday, has discussed the case with the president and his aides. A trial is set to start in less than two weeks.
After finally achieving profitability, the streaming platform wants to be a healthy alternative to “doom scrolling.”
The iPhone maker spent years trying to move production of some products out of China to avoid tariffs. But now that may not matter.
Milbank, based in Manhattan, agreed to provide $100 million in pro bono legal services to causes supported by the president and the firm.
Service sectors make up the vast bulk of the American economy, which gives trading partners some clout in trade negotiations.
The reorganization that began on Tuesday will scale back an agency that has been a public health model around the world.
Newsmax lost $55 million in the first half of last year. But its stock has surged this week as shares in the company traded on the public market for the first time.
The components used to assemble wind turbines are made by suppliers around the globe.
Passage would send a strong signal of bipartisan opposition to the levies, though the measure would face long odds in the House.
President Trump’s shares of the company have been held in a trust since he won the election last year. The stock has plunged 40 percent this year.
President Trump says that countries have been ripping off the United States for decades. There is some truth to that argument — but also a lot of hypocrisy.
The justices handed a win to the Food and Drug Administration in its rejection of applications from makers of flavored liquids used in e-cigarettes.
The move threatens to paralyze the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which helps to offset high utility bills for roughly 6.2 million people nationwide.
None of the nation’s top-10 firms by revenue have signed a legal brief demonstrating support for the law firm that is resisting an executive order.
European officials are weighing deploying a tool called the anti-coercion instrument that would potentially target American tech and financial giants.
The e-commerce giant put in a last-minute offer for the popular video app, according to three people familiar with the talks. TikTok faces a Saturday deadline to change its ownership structure.