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Liberation Day tariffs: Panic, recovery, & what comes next

‘Liberation Day’ Tariffs Sparked Economic Fear Throughout his third campaign for the US Presidency, Donald Trump consistently ...
Bill LaFayette and Jeff Cope say these importers either shoulder the added cost or pass it on to consumers, who also will pay ...
A Yale Budget Lab study believes the average household will lose $2,700 in purchasing power in 2025 due to the tariff’s ...
The president predicted a manufacturing renaissance. Economists forecast recession and runaway inflation. None of it has come ...
The Supreme Court could pave the way for companies to receive millions of dollars in refunds for the tariffs they’ve paid.
Analysts fear that reduced ordering by companies seeking to avoid tariff costs may create a goods recession in 2026.
The Trump administration is preparing to implement a "game two" plan to replace the tariffs currently under Supreme Court ...
I estimate that annual US potential growth could rise from 2 to 4 per cent by the end of this decade while stagflationary policies could reduce it by 0.5 percentage points. Thus, tech trumps tariffs.
Trump first announced his massive tariffs on “Liberation Day,” which was April 2. This was supposed to be the beginning of ...
Plus, Instacart is experimenting with dynamic pricing, 7-Eleven’s Japanese egg sandos have landed stateside, and more.
Buying gifts from overseas may lead to unexpected shipping fees for US shoppers ...