China, Trump and Tariffs
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Analysts welcomed the de-escalation agreed in Geneva, but told Newsweek that many questions remain unanswered.
The White House announced a "China trade deal" in a May 11 statement, but did not disclose details. The apparent agreement came together sooner than most observers expected after Trump's 145% tariffs on Chinese imports virtually halted $600 billion in annual trade between the world's two largest economies.
Chinese state media — and many outside analysts — declared Beijing had won round one of the trade war after the Trump administration rolled back many tariffs.
Trump touted the deal as "very big" and "maxed out" despite ... Trump escalated his trade war with China at the same time he paused reciprocal tariffs on every other nation. The standoff threatens ...
Trade deals are driving the recovery for U.S. stocks with the S&P 500 erasing all of its losses post Liberation Day. President Trump continues his Middle East trip striking partnerships and investments,
The president had previously suggested he floated trade incentives as a means to secure a ceasefire between India and Pakistan—a claim New Delhi has dismissed.
Next is the China factor. Third countries have two superpowers to keep happy. On May 14th Chinese officials attacked Britain’s deal with America, alleging that it indirectly targets China. Under the terms of the agreement,