The new tariffs will pile on a yawning trade gap, a tech war and a reluctance to cooperate. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Trade between the world's two largest economies is vast, but a yawning trade imbalance has long raised hackles in Washington.
China chose swift retaliation for trade measures in the first Trump administration, but that led to an upward spiral of trade measures and much broader tariffs.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that Canada will hit back at tariffs imposed by Trump with 25 per cent levies of its own ...
Carmakers, food producers and construction will be worst hit but consumers across the US, Mexico and Canada could suffer ...
President Trump’s tariffs on Canada, China, and Mexico could upend U.S. trade. These nine charts show what’s at stake, what ...
China’s Ministry of Commerce said it would file a legal case at the World Trade Organization, but signaled it still wanted a ...
The move likely will trigger retaliation and risk igniting a trade war that could cause broad economic disruption for all ...
White House official says US will pursue 'complete denuclearisation' but analysts believe Trump will instead pursue disarmament or reduction In the flurry of the first few days of Donald Trump's ...
Canada is poised to hit back by slapping tariffs on US products, with PM Justin Trudeau to make an announcement later on ...
An RFE/RL investigation uncovers how Chinese companies, including state-owned firms, are supplying Russia with critical ...