The August deadline has come, but the dangers to international relations and to world trade are both as real as ever.
Trump seems to be enjoying Pakistan as the flavor of the season in his spasmodic and whimsical judgments on friends, foes and U.S. national interest.
The U.S. president wields tariffs not as a policy tool but as an instrument of pressure.
The U.S. called India a natural ally for around 20 years, but ... the Trump administration declared India the worst abuser of tariffs.
Japan should proactively engage with European nations and members of the Trans-Pacific Partnership to counter Trump’s aggressive protectionism.
China has been and will continue to be committed to promoting healthy relations with the EU and the U.S.
U.S. high-tariff policy is against the trend of the times and will not hold for long.
Both sides need a pact as the dispute is hurting their nations’ economies and relations.
Beijing’s recent retaliation ... bodes ill for the already complicated trade war economics, though experts believe that China will be worse hit by a long drawn out battle.
Therefore, tariffs will raise the price of imported Chinese goods for consumers and businesses worldwide.
The direct coupling of trade policy with immigration is a drastic new step.