Trump, tariffs
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Trump, Brazil and US
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President Trump told reporters this week that he is considering a tariff rebate check. Here’s what he said and what we know.
April 9: Trump's higher "reciprocal tariffs" begin just after midnight. Hours later, the president says he is issuing a 90-day pause on those duties, except for China. Trump raises tariffs on Chinese goods from 104% to 145%, the highest rate so far this year.
President Donald Trump told reporters that his administration is considering sending rebate checks to Americans as a bonus from growing tariff revenues. "We're thinking about a little rebate," Trump said Friday before leaving on his trip to Scotland. "But the big thing we want to do is pay down debt. But we're thinking about a rebate."
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Explícame on MSNTariffs at risk? Court case advances that could block Trump's authorityA high-stakes legal challenge threatens to undermine the legal foundation of Trump’s sweeping trade and tariff powers under emergency law.
Trump has sent letters to leaders of dozens of countries outlining the tariff levels set to begin on Aug. 1. In recent months, Trump has rolled back some of his steepest tariffs, meaning delays could be possible in the case of the Aug. 1 deadline. The Trump administration appears to have stood largely behind the deadline in recent days, however.
US polls track President Donald Trump's current approval rating. How do polls say Americans feel on Trump in Epstein files? Tariffs? What we know today
Brazil’s inflation edged up in early July as US President Donald Trump threatened to slap the South American nation with punishing tariffs, further complicating the consumer price outlook for the central bank.
Trump has rolled back many of his steepest tariffs over recent months, including a sky-high levy on China, the top source of U.S. imports. In recent days, however, Trump announced plans to slap tariffs as high as 50% on dozens of countries, including 25% tariffs on top U.S. trade partners such as Japan and South Korea.
In an exclusive interview with Newsweek, the former Commerce Secretary discusses trade, China and tariffs under Trump 2.0.