Trump announces new 15% global tariff
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Geopolitical events and related uncertainties have contributed to choppy commodity and financial markets, but S&P Global’s PMIs point to relatively resilient economic conditions.
By Mark John and Philip Blenkinsop LONDON, Feb 20 (Reuters) - While the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling on Friday against President Donald Trump's use of tariffs marks a clear setback for his use of trade levies as an economic weapon,
How come it feels like it's all bad news in the global economy these days? According to one economist, something he calls the "doom loop."
The International Monetary Fund faulted China’s economic policies for causing waste at home and damage abroad and called for a reorientation by Beijing to embrace a model based on domestic consumer spending.
Global economy should grow at 3.2% sustained by AI investments and fiscal policy – Harvard economist
Harvard economist Gita Gopinath projects the global economy will grow at approximately 3.2% in 2026, matching the previous year’s pace, buoyed by AI investment tailwinds and stimulative fiscal policy.
The SDGs give us a compelling framework for an economy that truly serves people and planet. We need an urgent reset of our economic fundamentals around growth, equity and human flourishing.
Slowing growth, escalating trade wars, tightening cross-border capital flows, and intensifying migration pressures have dominated news headlines – and for good reason. Together, these forces threaten to undermine multilateralism and accelerate the rise ...
A third of the world still doesn't have mobile internet. That's costing the global economy big, says the GSMA. Their solution: charging more for content.
The European Commission says the United States needs to honor its tariff deal with the EU after the Supreme court blocked parts of President Donald Trump’s trade agenda