China, Trump
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China, US and tariff
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President Donald Trump‘s top aides spilled the beans Wednesday about how they convinced him to back off his sky-high tariffs on China. They boasted to The Washington Post that they used data showing how his base of support—in particular truckers and longshoremen—would be hurt by the levies to change his mind.
Xi Jinping’s defiance against Donald Trump pays off with the dramatic tariffs reduction. Bloomberg reporters answer your questions on what lies ahead.
Two days of high-stakes talks between the US and China have led to a 90-day pause on tariffs, with duties set to drop by 115 percentage points on both sides by Wednesday and with President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping now likely to talk in the coming days.
A wave of protests over factory closures in China in recent weeks appeared to show the impact of U.S. tariffs on a highly exposed sector that employs millions. The demonstrations, a reflection of the export-driven economy's early pain,
The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) grouping warned on Thursday that exports in the region will barely grow this year amid the onset of U.S. tariffs, as the U.S. and Chinese trade representatives met on the sidelines of the gathering.
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Daily Express US on MSNChina slams US-UK trade deal calls it 'poison pills' worse than Trump tariffsBeijing has argued that the US-UK trade agreement has violated the "basic principle" of not targeting other countries
On Monday, Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers shared highlights on his X account from his appearance on CNN's “The Arena,” where he discussed the Trump administration's move to back off from its “extremely punitive” tariff regime against
Online shoppers in the U.S. will see a price break on their purchases valued at less than $800 and shipped from China after the Trump administration reached a truce with Beijing over sky-high tariffs.