When President-elect Donald Trump returns to the White House, tariffs are likely to once again play a major role in his policy agenda.
Price changes that result from tariffs typically occur all at once. Inflation, however, reflects stimulus to the economy in ...
Trump’s threatened tariffs on Canada and Mexico may boost inflation in the U.S., but there’s still “huge uncertainty” around macroeconomic forecasts, according to Deutsche Bank Research.
Large economies will generally be more closed to external trade than smaller ones (hence the EU and Eurozone are more closed than individual member states), but the US is in a league of its own ...
CADJPY has lost its shine as the Japanese yen strengthens, hitting an intraday low of 107.32, with current trading around 108 ...
"The charts ... suggest that tariffs had little impact on the market ... losses the moment that the Fed stopped raising interest rates. ... I think she's got a real good point." ...
The Biden-Harris administration has kept most of these tariffs in place and increased the rate of some of the duties. Trump has said that if he wins the election, his administration could use ...
The second chart, however, shows the effect of high tariffs with an underlying steady inflation rate. The higher tariffs push prices up once, but the tariffs don’t change the inflation rate in ...
But he said the situation is "complicated," with the risk being that other tariffs could cause "a general reset of price expectations higher." The Fed embarked in September on a rate-cutting cycle ...