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President-elect Donald Trump said he will impose a 25% tariff on all goods from Mexico and Canada when he takes office in January.
The tariff rates were calculated using exports and imports from each country, a look at the formula.
Trump's new tariffs are forcing businesses to pore over obscure HTS import codes, rework products, and diversify supply chains to keep costs down.
As US tariffs on Indian exports rise to 50%, an obscure ‘transshipment clause’ targeting Chinese inputs could reshape ...
As radical increases in US tariffs begin to redefine the country’s trading relationships, American consumers are getting a ...
Inflation is creeping back into the US economy and might get a lot worse in the near future, thanks to President Trump's tariffs.
Most Indian goods entering the US market will now attract a 50 per cent duty, with a few exceptions. The initial 25 per cent ...
It has been another week of whiplash updates on tariff orders from Washington after the month-long delay on President Donald Trump’s previous order for tariffs against imports from Canada and ...
How Are Trump’s Tariff Rates Calculated? It’s a basic formula, and it doesn’t include what countries charge the U.S. By Matt Grossman Follow ...
When could tariff-driven price increases hit shoppers? Experts explain So far, the U.S. has defied economists' fears of a tariff-induced price surge.
The administration appears to have used a simple, two-step formula to calculate the "reciprocal tariffs" applied to trading partners.
If you've ever purchased something inexpensive from Amazon, AliExpress, Temu, or Shein, you've escaped tariffs with what's known as a de minimis exemption. The Trump administration has eliminated it.