Incredibly, in his abrupt reversal on trade policy, Trump seemingly just *increased* tariffs on Mexico and Canada to 10%.
Until today, the U.S. has only had 25% tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminium, and autos, plus 10% on energy and potash. (With the caveat that it's 0% for USMCA-compliant trade.)
Until today, the U.S. has only had 25% tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminium, and autos, plus 10% on energy and potash. (With the caveat that it's 0% for USMCA-compliant trade.)
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Bannon has mentioned that their policy strategy has long been throw so much crap at you that you can't deal with it all, but this may be a step further. Just create so much chaos that people don't even know the actual state of things
"They don't have the cards"
They’re probably calling the Poilievre campaign to see if the 10% additional tariffs would hurt his election campaign. 😂
Canucks are strongly dedicated to keeping their #ElbowsUp and rejecting US goods.
(And be sure to #VoteCarney, Canada!!)
The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) is what Trump broke
Mental. Giant.
The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) is what Trump broke
The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) is what Trump broke
But, really, I think it'll be the USian economy that will be the hardest hit.
If they had a decent process, then maybe markets and countries could actually track this stuff.
What a way to run a country.
Regardless.
How the hell is anyone keeping track of this?
Taking tariffs when they on/off/postponed/ impending/changing/products, etc?
Do importers/exporters/businesses do it, who takes in the money? R biz with small profit margins in trouble cause of the day?
🍁🛶❤️💙💚🔬⚖️🌻🌻🌻✊
The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) is what Trump broke