Trump, rebate and tariff
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As the tariff pause ends, the Trump administration should pivot to a more targeted and strategic policy that minimizes domestic harm.
A debate over inflation is once again turning on the question of whether any price rise from Trump's tariffs would be fleeting or not.
The debate on tariffs ignores a very big issue: the tax wedge. A tariff is a tax, and a tax is a wedge, an obstacle between buyer and seller. How harmful the tax wedge is, of course, depends on its size and breadth.
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MiBolsilloColombia on MSNTrump's Tariffs to Generate $300 Billion for Federal Government: Is It Worth the Inflation Risk?The Trump administration's tariffs promise significant federal revenue, but rising inflation raises concerns. As the Federal Reserve grapples with economic pressures, the question remains: do the fiscal benefits outweigh the economic costs for American consumers?
Slashing government interest rates could have the paradoxical effect of raising the interest rates paid in the real world.
As a Harvard professor, Elizabeth Warren rang the alarm bell in the lead up to the 2008 financial crisis. Now a veteran senator, she is ringing that bell again.
Economist Steve Moore talks to FOX News host Sean Hannity about the "Trump Economic Miracle." SEAN HANNITY: All right, Steve Moore, the one thing you were skeptical of and you wrote the book "Trumpnomics" in fairness to you and it was a bestseller.
Will President Trump’s aggressive approach to global trade bring production and jobs home to the U.S. — or raise prices for all consumers while disrupting vital supply chains?
President Donald Trump is once again floating the idea of firing Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, ostensibly in objection to excessively high interest rates. But this debate is not about
A proposed bipartisan US sanctions bill threatens to impose a 500 per cent tariff on countries like India that continue buying Russian oil. But President Donald Trump is pushing for complete control over its implementation — turning the legislation into a litmus test for US foreign policy,
Lavorgna’s comments underscore how a debate over inflation is once again turning on the question of whether any price rise from Trump's tariffs would be fleeting or not.