Canada, tariffs
Digest more
Top News
Impacts
Carney said he expects the counter-tariffs to generate up to approximately $8 billion and said “every single dollar raised from those counter-tariffs… will go directly to our auto workers and the com...
From The Hill
World markets were left reeling on Thursday after U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled reciprocal tariffs to match duties put on U.S. goods by other countries.
From Reuters
Read more on News Digest
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney placed counter-tariffs on U.S. vehicles that are not compliant with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement in response to President Donald Trump’s tariffs. On Feb.
Economists say that anywhere from 10 per cent to 20 per cent of U.S.-bound shipments can’t feasibly be made compliant
Experts say President Trump’s retaliatory tariff announcement is setting a new precedent for trade in North America. Juan Carlos Baker is CEO of Ansley International Consultants. “We just witnessed the most significant developments in trade policy in maybe 3 decades.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney announced a limited set of counter measures against U.S. tariffs on Thursday while calling President Donald Trump's protectionist moves a tragedy for global trade.
According to Trump’s latest executive order, Mexico and Canada’s 25 per cent tariff on non-USMCA goods would go down to 12 per cent if the US is happy with their compliance on stopping fentanyl and halting illegal migration.
President Sheinbaum celebrated after the United States government didn't announce any "reciprocal tariffs" on imports from Mexico.
News that Canada and Mexico are excluded from President Trump’s reciprocal tariff regime is a positive sign, giving a competitive advantage to the USMCA partners over other nations, said Pedro Casas Alatriste,
As President Trump pushes his massive global tariffs into effect, America’s former trading partners are designing their own, retaliatory tariffs, that are sure to have a walloping effect on Americans’ pocketbooks.