Sentences with phrase «see import tariffs»

British producers of machinery, electrical equipment, automobiles, and pharmaceuticals will see import tariffs of...
Somewhat surprisingly he sees import tariffs on products from nonparticipant countries as a part of the most promising solution.

Not exact matches

The relationship has seen Trump threaten to impose tariffs on up to $ 150 billion of Chinese imports, a move that could trigger a trade war between the worlds two largest economies.
This plan would see the Customs Code cleaned up, imports from China receive the least favourable tariff treatment, and tariffs for Canadian consumers go down, rather than up by $ 333 million per year.
President Donald Trump's decision on Tuesday to impose tariffs on imported washing machines and solar panels launched in earnest his long - anticipated crusade against what he sees as unfair trade.
Americans could see the price of washing machines soar thanks to President Trump's new tariffs on appliance imports, said Goldman Sachs.
President Xi Jinping promised on Tuesday to open the country's economy further and lower import tariffs on products like cars, in a speech seen as an attempt to defuse the increasingly bitter dispute with the United States and possibly open the way for the start of negotiations after both sides threatened tit - for - tat tariffs.
It would be surprising if there are any actual tariff cuts in Budget 2016, but I would like to see the government commit to a process to selectively eliminate import tariffs.
The time it has taken investors and traders to wrap their heads around Trump's industry tariffs and the pyrrhic victory of two solar companies in a case against cheap Chinese imports has seen stocks rally in a big way, and then fall just as hard.
I can see why the New York Times (and most other commentators) immediately attributed this decision to protectionism: not only does that match President Trump's rhetoric both on the campaign trail and also in office, but it follows closely on the decision to impose tariffs on imported steel.
Torsten Sløk of Deutsche Bank shares the chart of how Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs, and notes that «when prices of imported steel and aluminum increase it will hurt states that are big importers of steel and aluminum» (For more discussion see here and here).
We saw this in 2002, when George W. Bush imposed aggressive trade tariffs (up to 30 % on imported steel) in an attempt to rescue the declining US steel industry.
The relationship has seen Trump threaten to impose tariffs on up to $ 150 billion of Chinese imports, a move that could trigger a trade war between the world's two largest economies.
V. Formusa Co., a 120 - year - old Des Plaines - based Italian foods manufacturer and distributor, wants to see tariffs removed on imported pepperoncini, while Inventus Power, a Woodridge - based battery - maker, is fighting to keep tariffs in place to protect its domestic production.
Workers in construction, transportation, retail, banks, hotels, utilities and other professionals would «clearly lose» in a tariff war, the economists say, adding farmers would be doubly hurt — paying higher prices for imported goods and seeing export options curtailed.
Significant gains have already been made by the Australian wine industry in China, thanks to a Free Trade Agreement signed by the two countries in 2105 that will see tariffs on imports for both countries reduced to zero over a period of five years.
Trump's decision to seek steep tariffs on steel and aluminum imports has provoked rarely seen urgency among Republicans, now scrambling to convince the president that he would spark a trade war that could stall the economy's recent gains if he doesn't reverse course.
Thanks to high import tariffs, Brazil is home to several home - grown Volkswagen models not sold (and rarely seen) elsewhere in the world.
In a Trump world, could we see PS4 pricing increase through new trade tariffs helping XBox One and future XBox system sales vs. imported competition?
Feed - in tariffs on fossil energy imports to the United States would surely end up reducing demand for fossil fuels as more and more renewable capacity became available — which is exactly what you would want to see happen if you are serious about slowing the rate of global warming.
Also, I can't see any way of making such a scheme global, leaving us to fall back on import tariffs — which would have to be on both raw fuels / energy and on manufactured goods (including food).
I would not be surprised to see carbon tariffs discussed to tax imports from countries like the US that are not engaged with the process or actively reducing emissions.
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