As President Donald Trump doubles down on his escalating trade war against some of the country’s biggest economic partners, he is declining to rule out a recession as economic uncertainty grows. Meanwhile,
US President Donald Trump has refused to say whether the US economy is facing a recession or price rises in the wake of his administration's changes to tariff threats against some of its closest trading partners. Asked if he was expecting a recession this year, Trump said there was a "period of transition" taking place.
Long-threatened tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump have plunged the country into a trade war abroad — all while on-again, off-again new levies continue to escalate uncertainty. Since taking office less than two months ago,
Former central banker Mark Carney will become prime minister after the governing Liberal Party elected him its leader Sunday in a landside vote with 85.9% support.
Trump refuses to rule out recession as chaotic trade war with Canada, Mexico and China escalates: Live updates - President’s remarks follow turbulent week as markets rattled by series of aggressive ta
An expert suggests that Donald Trump is after Greenland's resources, similar to the way he's forced Ukraine to sign over some mineral rights
The 59-year-old political newcomer says he will keep tariffs on US imports "until the Americans show us respect".
The leaders of both Canada and Mexico got on the phone with President Donald Trump this past week to seek solutions after he slapped tariffs on their countries, but China’s president appears unlikely to make a similar call soon.
Starting just past midnight Tuesday, imports from Canada and Mexico are now taxed at 25%, with Canadian energy products getting tariffed at 10%.
European shares dipped to their lowest in almost a month on Monday and world stocks followed as building deflationary pressure in China added to growth worries from a lacklustre U.S. economy and an escalating global trade war.
National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett said in an interview with ABC News' "This Week" that the tariffs are not meant to start a trade war. "What happened was that we launched a drug war, not a trade war, and it was part of the negotiation to get Canada and Mexico to stop shipping fentanyl across our borders," Hassett said.