Tariffs, transactional deals, and trade wars will impact international business after Trump is gone. Four essential issues key to resilient international trade strategy.
In this Economic Letter, we consider the impact of TPU on firms’ decisions to reshore and automate production. Using industry-level data, we show that firms in industries more exposed to international ...
The year 2024 witnessed a number of meaningful anniversaries for the United States and its allies: the 80th anniversary of D-Day, when Allied forces landed on the beaches of Normandy, heralding the ...
The trade deficit has long drawn the president’s ire. Now, he’s preparing to take it on again. By Ana Swanson Ana Swanson covers international trade and is based in Washington To President Trump, one ...
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks with economist Mary Lovely of the Peterson Institute about trade deficits and the role they play in international trade. Both tensions and relations between the U.S. and its ...
On February 1, local time, in defiance of widespread international opposition and citing 'addressing illegal immigration and the fentanyl crisis' as reasons, the US government formally signed an ...
On April 2, a day he dubbed “Liberation Day,” President Donald Trump stood in the White House Rose Garden and announced a sweeping new program of tariffs intended to rebalance U.S. trade. Trump’s ...
International Economics examines the cross‐border flow of goods, services, capital and information, shaping how nations interact within an increasingly interdependent global economy. Its scope extends ...
The global economy is on track for a soft landing in 2025, a scenario characterized by stable growth and managed inflation risks, as economies adapt to shifting geopolitical and economic dynamics.
The United States could achieve modest economic benefits by applying uniform tariffs on all trade partners, according to new research led by a University of California, Davis, economist. However, the ...
As the world economy faces unprecedented shifts, the dynamics of global trade, exchange rates and capital flows are evolving in ways that challenge established economic theory and policy frameworks.
Nigel Driffield receives funding from the Economic and Social Research Council. He is an inactive member of the Labour Party and an advisor to the mayor of the West Midlands Those of us who study ...