Donald Trump once referred to Kim Jon-un as the Little Rocket Man. And now he says he’s in love with him as he writes beautiful letters to Trump. When it comes to the US-China trade war we can ask two big questions: where is it all heading and what migh
Objective research on the US-China trade war and trade tensions. Impact of the trade war on global value chains, industries, investment, innovation and consumer welfare.
China could target 'other US interests' in trade spat: Economist If the proposed tariffs on both sides are enacted, then it's a trade war, saidMax Baucus, former U.S. ambassador to China under PresidentBarack Obama. Trump's newest announcement of potential tariffs on an additional $200 bil...
A continually updated timeline of US-China trade war news, focusing on all the major events and what led up to it.
concerned with the global electronics supply chain, has been monitoring this situation and is concerned by thepossible disruptionof the market—a disruption that would not only be difficult for consumers but possibly also damage global market access that is integral in retaining free and open trade....
Businesses in China are also feeling the effects of the trade war, which has weighed on the country’s financial markets. Investors are becoming increasingly concerned about how a slowing Chinese economy will weather a protracted dispute with the United States. The country’s huge export industry...
ties are currently beset by escalating trade tensions. The current trade deadlock has attracted significant attention from around the world and raised key questions. What are the causes of this situation, and what has propelled the Trump administration to persist in its tariff attacks towards China...
“I think they still want to trade with the U.S., so they’ll be willing to give up something,” says Braun. “But ideally, it has to be an international effort, so that China would stand to lose access around the world if they didn’t comply.” That would include the European ...
The situation is the same today. In a report by CNBC last month, data from the University of Oxford shows that if the actual value of the country’s trade consisted of only “added value,” the trade deficit between China and the United States would be reduced by half, from 2 percent ...
Then also we have a situation, which is quite similar, I think, in we have a rising power in the form of China. RITHOLTZ, MIB HOST:Let’s talk about that, because in the ’30s you had Italy and Japan and Germany rising to challenge the existing powers — how parallel is the growing...