Where Trump’s tariffs could hurt Americans’ wallets

As global financial markets plunge in the wake of US President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs, Americans must also grapple with the potentially long-lasting impact of the move on household budgets.The tariffs — which are paid in the first instance by US importers — will likely push up the price of many household items in the United States and reduce consumers’ spending power. – Grocery store costs -The US imports a growing share of the fresh fruits and vegetables consumed each year, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).Many of the fresh goods come from Canada and Mexico, two countries not immediately affected by the tariffs announced Wednesday. But other goods will be hit by the stinging duties set to come into effect this month.For example, the United States imports large quantities of bananas from the Latin American countries of Guatemala, Ecuador and Costa Rica, which will all face a 10 percent tariff from April 5.Coffee — around 80 percent of which is imported, according to the USDA — is likely to see a price increase, given that top exporters Brazil and Colombia will also face the new baseline 10 percent rate.Olive oil and alcohol imports from Italy, Spain and Greece will be hit with a new 20 percent levy against the European Union from April 9. And Thai jasmine rice and Indian basmati rice will face tariffs of 36 percent and 26 percent respectively, while Indian shrimp — which the US imports large quantities of — will face the same 26 percent rate. – Electronics and cars -Consumer electronics are also set to be hit with steep tariffs this month, given how many of products are manufactured or assembled in India and China. Despite moves to expand its supply chain, Apple still makes the vast majority of its iPhones in China, through supplier Foxconn, where hardware exports will be hit with a tariff totaling 54 percent from April 9.Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo predicted that US buyers of high-end iPhones, who account for as much as 70 percent of sales, are “relatively more accepting of price increases.”On top of the measures announced Wednesday, the Trump administration has also rolled out a 25 percent tariff against vehicles not made in the United States — a step analysts have warned could add thousands to the cost of the average car. – Shoes, clothes -Shares of clothing and textile companies, which rely on cheap labor in countries including China and Vietnam, fell sharply Thursday, with Nike sinking more than 13 percent and Gap tanking more than 20 percent.The new tariffs announced Wednesday mean imports to the United States from China and Vietnam will be taxed at 54 percent and 46 percent respectively. Yale’s Budget Lab estimated the effect of recent tariffs, up to and including Wednesday’s announcement, would cause a 17 percent rise in the cost of clothing and textiles.The think tank calculated that the overall effect on prices of the tariffs announced so far was equivalent to an average per household consumer loss of $3,800.Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Trump insisted that tariffs would make the United States “very rich.””The operation is over,” he said, referring to the recent tariff announcement. “And now we let it settle in.”

Trump says ‘very close to a deal’ on TikTok

President Donald Trump said his administration was “very close” to a deal to find a buyer for TikTok, which faces a US ban if not sold by its Chinese owner by the weekend.”We’re very close to a deal with a very good group of people,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, adding that it involved “multiple” investors but giving no further details.The hugely popular video-sharing app, which has over 170 million American users, is under threat from a US law that passed overwhelmingly last year and orders TikTok to split from its Chinese owner ByteDance or face a ban in the United States.Motivated by national security fears and widespread belief in Washington that TikTok is ultimately controlled by the Chinese government, the law took effect on January 19, one day before Trump’s inauguration.But the Republican president quickly announced a delay that has allowed it to continue to operate; that delay is set to expire on April 5.Trump has downplayed risks that TikTok is in danger of being banned in the United States, saying he remains confident of finding a buyer for the app’s US business.The US president also suggested TikTok could even be part of a broader deal with China to ease the stinging tariffs he imposed on Beijing as part of a worldwide blitz of levies.Asked Thursday if he was willing to make deals with countries on tariffs, he said: “As long as they are giving us something that is good. For instance with TikTok.”He added: “We have a situation with TikTok where China will probably say we’ll approve a deal but will you do something on the tariffs. The tariffs give us great power to negotiate.”According to reports, the most likely solution would see existing US investors in ByteDance roll over their stakes into a new independent global TikTok company.Additional US investors, including Oracle and Blackstone, the private equity firm, would be brought on to reduce the proportion of Chinese investors.Much of TikTok’s US activity is already housed on Oracle servers, and the company’s chairman, Larry Ellison, is a longtime Trump ally.But uncertainty remains, particularly over what would happen to TikTok’s valuable algorithm. The New York Times suggested the new company could licence it from ByteDance.Amazon has also reportedly made a last-minute bid to buy TikTok.

Prison ferme: les députés reviennent sur les aménagements automatiques des courtes peines

La prison plutôt que le bracelet électronique: les députés ont adopté jeudi un texte pour faire de l’incarcération la règle plutôt que l’exception en revenant sur l’aménagement obligatoire des courtes peines d’emprisonnement.La proposition de loi a été examinée en première lecture dans le cadre de la niche parlementaire du groupe Horizons, journée annuelle réservée aux textes des élus du parti de l’ex-Premier ministre Edouard Philippe.Elle s’inscrit dans une “volonté de restaurer l’autorité de l’Etat, de l’élu local au magistrat”, selon son président Paul Christophe, car “nous avons la conviction qu’une justice plus dissuasive est nécessaire et qu’elle est attendue par les Français”.Le texte rétablit la possibilité de prononcer des peines de prison ferme de moins d’un mois et abroge le principe selon lequel une peine inférieure ou égale à six mois doit obligatoirement faire l’objet d’un aménagement, comme le port du bracelet électronique – sauf décision motivée du juge.Pour le député Loïc Kervran, la politique pénale a souffert ces dernières années d’une “idéologie anti-prison”, avec la systématisation des aménagements.Citant un rapport de la Cour des comptes sur les aménagements obligatoires pour les courtes peines qui auraient conduit les magistrats à prononcer des peines plus longues pour s’assurer de leur exécution, M. Kervran a avancé qu’ils n’avaient pas produit l’effet escompté sur la diminution de la surpopulation carcérale. L’extrême droite a apporté son soutien à cette proposition tout en dénonçant “une loi d’affichage”, selon les mots de Sylvie Josserand. La députée RN a comparé l’examen de ce texte à Pénélope dans l’Odyssée d’Homère, qui “défaisait la nuit le grand voile qu’elle avait tissé le jour”, soulignant que le texte revient sur plusieurs dispositions introduites par la réforme de la justice de 2019 portée par le gouvernement d’Edouard Philippe.Durant son intervention, des députés de gauche n’ont pas manqué de l’invectiver, faisant référence à la condamnation de Marine Le Pen notamment à quatre ans de prison (dont deux ans ferme aménagés sous bracelet électronique) pour détournement de fonds. Un procès en appel doit se tenir en 2026.Tour à tour, à la tribune, les élus insoumis, communistes, écologistes et socialistes ont fustigé l’inefficacité des courtes peines de prison, coûteuses, désocialisantes, augmentant les risques de récidives et aggravant la surpopulation carcérale.- Textes retirés -Une ritournelle qui a filé avec l’examen en début de soirée d’un autre texte porté par le groupe Horizons, établissant sa propre vision des “peines planchers”, dont l’ancien président Nicolas Sarkozy avait fait une mesure emblématique.Porté par Naïma Moutchou, ce texte, rejeté en commission, prévoit une peine minimale d’emprisonnement ferme pour des faits de violences en état de récidive, lorsqu’elles visent les policiers, gendarmes, pompiers ou personnels soignants.Mais après une heure de débats, Mme Moutchou a finalement décidé de retirer sa proposition de loi, accusant d’obstruction des élus de gauche qui, avec leur dizaine d’amendements, empêchaient selon elle l’examen d’aller à son terme. En effet, comme lors de toute “niche” parlementaire, les débats doivent se terminer obligatoirement à minuit.Plus tôt, le même argument a été avancé par le député Xavier Albertini qui a lui aussi retiré son texte portant sur l’accueil des gens du voyage. La proposition de loi visait à lutter plus fermement contre les occupations illégales de terrain.Au cours de la journée, la gauche n’a eu de cesse de dénoncer des textes “répressifs”, s’inscrivant dans “la course à l’échalote” engagée par le bloc central, selon les mots de l’écologiste Charles Fournier, qui accuse Horizons de suivisme à l’égard des idées du Rassemblement national.La “niche” s’est toutefois conclue, comme elle avait débuté, dans la concorde.Dix minutes avant l’heure fatidique, les députés ont adopté à l’unanimité un texte visant à augmenter les effectifs d’orthophonistes, alors qu’en France on compte une moyenne de 30 orthophonistes pour 100 000 habitants.Dans la matinée, l’hémicycle s’était emparé d’un texte consensuel sur les réserves communales de sécurité civile, constituées de citoyens bénévoles, sous l’autorité du maire. Celles-ci peuvent être mobilisées par exemple lors de catastrophes naturelles.Le texte, examiné en première lecture, entend faciliter le processus de mobilisation, en supprimant notamment le plafond de 15 jours d’activités par an par bénévole. Il avait aussi été adopté à l’unanimité des votants.

Trump tariffs on Mexico: the good, the bad, the unknown

At first glance, Mexico got off lightly from Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs blitz.The US president has repeatedly threatened the United States’ top trading partner with punishing tariffs over illegal migration and drug smuggling.So it was a surprise when he left Mexico off the list of nations on which he imposed levies ranging from 10 to 50 percent.The relief in Mexico, which has a free-trade deal with the United States and Canada, was tempered by concern over the 25-percent levies Trump slapped on foreign-made imported vehicles.That includes some of the three million vehicles the Latin American country sends north across the border each year.AFP looks at how Mexico, whose President Claudia Sheinbaum has been walking a diplomatic tightrope with Trump, fared generally:- The good – Mexico avoided the 10-percent blanket tariffs imposed by Trump on several Latin American countries, including ones with staunchly pro-Trump governments such as Argentina and El Salvador.For the moment at least, some Mexican exports to the United States remain tariff-free.Analysts at BBVA bank said the fact that Mexico faced a lower level of relative protectionism “could give it advantages in accessing the US market and, therefore, attracting investment.”They said it could act as an incentive for nearshoring — companies moving their operations to Mexico from other countries to use it as a tariff-free or low-tariff port of entry to the United States.”It would simply be more profitable or less expensive to export these goods from Mexico than from countries with higher tariffs,” BBVA said.During Trump’s first presidency from 2017-2021, scores of Chinese companies relocated their production to northern Mexico to avoid tariffs — a bone of contention for the Republican leader.- The bad -Parts of Mexico’s vital automotive industry are reeling after being hit with 25 percent tariffs, which come a month after Trump imposed levies on other goods from Mexico and Canada not covered by the United States-Mexico-Canada-Agreement (USMCA) trade deal.Mexico’s steel and aluminum exports to the United States have, since March, also been subject to 25 percent tariffs.”We shouldn’t be subject to these tariffs simply because the USMCA agreement provides otherwise,” Juan Francisco Torres-Landa, a partner at consulting firm Hogan Lovells in Mexico City, told AFP.The automotive tariffs are particularly painful for Mexico.In recent years, several major automakers including Ford, General Motors, BMW, and Audi have outsourced part of their production to Mexico because of its tariff-free access to the United States.Under Trump’s new rules, US vehicle parts will not face tariffs. But manufacturers say that with automotive components crossing the US-Mexico border multiple times during the assembly process, it is nearly impossible to ascertain which are American.Torres-Landa called the provision “gibberish.” “A car must have about 10,000 parts; tracking them to see what you pay (tariffs) for and what you don’t pay for is a very complex equation,” he said.A day after the tariffs were announced, the shockwaves are still being felt.Stellantis (born out of the merger of Fiat Chrysler and Renault) said it would immediately pause production at some of its Mexican and Canadian plants.Volkswagen, meanwhile, indicated it would halt rail shipments of vehicles made in Mexico to the United States, Automotive News said.The Mexican government said Thursday that over the next 40 days it will attempt to negotiate “the best conditions” with the Trump administration for the automotive, steel, and aluminum industries.- The unknown -The uncertainty caused by Trump’s repeated threats of steep tariffs has already caused a slowdown in manufacturing activity.While the Mexican government has forecast economic growth of about 1.5 percent this year, analysts surveyed by the central bank said this week they expected it to come in much lower, at 0.5 percent.In the country’s northern industrial borderlands, home to thousands of factories built to serve the US market, Mexicans fear mass layoffs.”I think difficult times are coming,” trucker Omar Zepeda told AFP in the border city of Tijuana this week.

Trump tariffs hammer global stocks, dollar and oil

Stock markets and the dollar tumbled Thursday after President Donald Trump’s latest worldwide tariff salvo fanned a trade war that many fear will spark recession and ramp up inflation.The dollar slumped by as much as 2.6 percent versus the euro, its biggest intraday plunge in a decade, and suffered sharp losses also against the yen and British pound.On stock markets, Wall Street’s tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dove around six percent, while the retreat in the S&P 500 was its biggest in a day since 2020.”The simultaneous decline in both stocks and the US dollar speaks volumes about investor confidence in Trump’s trade policy,” said City Index and FOREX.com analyst Fawad Razaqzada.Shares in apparel companies, which rely on cheap labor in factories abroad, fell sharply with Nike sinking more than 11 percent and Gap tanking more than 20 percent.Apple, whose iPhones are largely manufactured in China, fell over nine percent.Across the globe shares in major sectors including auto, luxury and banking, also took big hits.Shares in Jeep-maker Stellantis fell 7.5 percent after it said it would pause production at some plants in Canada and Mexico as 25 percent car tariffs came into force.Tokyo’s Nikkei briefly collapsed more than four percent. In Europe, both the Paris and Frankfurt stock exchanges finished the day with losses of more than three percent.Oil prices plummeted more than six percent on concerns an economic downturn would hit demand.Gold, a safe haven asset in times of uncertainty, hit a new peak of $3,167.84 an ounce before retreating somewhat.Yields on government bonds fell as investors fled risky assets and piled into safe-haven treasuries.- Renewed rate cuts? -The panic came after the US president unveiled a blitz of harsher-than-expected levies aimed at countries he said had been “ripping off” the United States for years.The measures included a 34 percent tariff on world number two economy China, 20 percent on the European Union and 24 percent on Japan.A number of others will face specifically tailored tariff levels, and for the rest, Trump said he would impose a “baseline” tariff of 10 percent, including on Britain.”Markets, unsurprisingly have reacted badly,” noted Richard Carter, head of fixed interest research at wealth manager Quilter. “(US) Treasury yields have fallen sharply, as investors take flight and look for safe haven assets. “This would suggest the Federal Reserve will need to put additional rate cuts on the table to look to prevent recession being triggered, but should it face inflation rising too, it is in somewhat of a bind,” Carter added.As world markets tumbled, Trump acknowledged the shock brought by his tariffs, likening it to a medical “operation,” but said the US economy would emerge “far stronger.”White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt appeared to rule out the possibility of Trump pulling back any of the tariffs before they are implemented over the coming weekend.”The president made it clear yesterday this is not a negotiation,” she said on CNN.However, Trump later said he would negotiate “as long as they are giving something that is good.”Investors are bracing for retaliatory measures, but governments also left the door open for talks.China vowed “countermeasures” and urged Washington to cancel the tariffs, while calling for dialogue. European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc was “preparing for further countermeasures” but she emphasised it was “not too late to address concerns through negotiations”.- Key figures around 2200 GMT -New York – Dow: DOWN 4.0 percent at 40,545.93 (close)New York – S&P 500: DOWN 4.8 percent at 5,396.52 (close)New York – Nasdaq Composite: DOWN 6.0 percent at 16,550.61 (close)Paris – CAC 40: DOWN 3.3 percent at 7,598.98 (close)Frankfurt – DAX: DOWN 3.0 percent at 21,717.39 (close)London – FTSE 100: DOWN 1.6 percent at 8,474.74 (close)Tokyo – Nikkei 225: DOWN 2.8 percent at 34,735.93 (close)Hong Kong – Hang Seng Index: DOWN 1.5 percent at 22,849.81 (close)Shanghai – Composite: DOWN 0.2 percent at 3,342.01 (close)Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1050 from $1.0853 on WednesdayPound/dollar: UP at $1.3099 from $1.3007Dollar/yen: DOWN at 145.99 yen from 149.28 yenEuro/pound: UP at 84.34 pence from 83.44 penceWest Texas Intermediate: DOWN 6.6 percent at $66.95 per barrelBrent North Sea Crude: DOWN 6.4 percent at $70.14 per barrelburs-jmb/des

Oscar-winning Palestinian director speaks at UN on Israeli settlements

Palestinian director Basel Adra, who won an Oscar this year for co-directing a documentary on Israeli violence in the West Bank, sounded the alarm at the UN on Thursday, saying the situation was worsening despite the film’s success.Adra was invited to speak by the UN Committee on the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People at a screening of his film, “No Other Land.”The documentary chronicles the forced displacement of Palestinians by Israeli troops and settlers in Masafer Yatta — an area Israel declared a restricted military zone in the 1980s.”I wanted the world to know that we live in this land, that we exist, and to see what we face on daily basis, this brutal occupation,” Adra told the UN.The film depicts events like bulldozers demolishing houses and a school, as well as the provocations by Israeli settlers on Palestinian residents — including those which escalate to violence.After a prolonged legal battle, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled in 2022 in favor of the Israeli army, allowing the expulsion of residents from eight villages in the region.”Even after winning the Oscar, we went back to the same reality,” Adra said, adding that the situation was “only changing from worse to worse.””Almost every day, there is settlers attacks on Masafer Yatta and all over communities across the West Bank,” Adra continued.Last week, Adra’s co-director and fellow Palestinian Hamdan Ballal reported he was attacked by Israeli settlers for winning the Oscar, saying he was detained by Israeli police for “hurling rocks” at which point he suffered a beating and “brutality.”Rights groups have said that since the start of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza — a separate Palestinian territory — there has been a spike in attacks by Israeli settlers in the West Bank.Occupied by Israel since 1967, the West Bank is home to around three million Palestinians, as well as nearly half a million Israelis who live in settlements that are illegal under international law.”No Other Land,” despite winning a prestigious Oscar, has struggled to find distribution in the United States, screening at only a handful of cinemas.

Oscar-winning Palestinian director speaks at UN on Israeli settlements

Palestinian director Basel Adra, who won an Oscar this year for co-directing a documentary on Israeli violence in the West Bank, sounded the alarm at the UN on Thursday, saying the situation was worsening despite the film’s success.Adra was invited to speak by the UN Committee on the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People at a screening of his film, “No Other Land.”The documentary chronicles the forced displacement of Palestinians by Israeli troops and settlers in Masafer Yatta — an area Israel declared a restricted military zone in the 1980s.”I wanted the world to know that we live in this land, that we exist, and to see what we face on daily basis, this brutal occupation,” Adra told the UN.The film depicts events like bulldozers demolishing houses and a school, as well as the provocations by Israeli settlers on Palestinian residents — including those which escalate to violence.After a prolonged legal battle, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled in 2022 in favor of the Israeli army, allowing the expulsion of residents from eight villages in the region.”Even after winning the Oscar, we went back to the same reality,” Adra said, adding that the situation was “only changing from worse to worse.””Almost every day, there is settlers attacks on Masafer Yatta and all over communities across the West Bank,” Adra continued.Last week, Adra’s co-director and fellow Palestinian Hamdan Ballal reported he was attacked by Israeli settlers for winning the Oscar, saying he was detained by Israeli police for “hurling rocks” at which point he suffered a beating and “brutality.”Rights groups have said that since the start of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza — a separate Palestinian territory — there has been a spike in attacks by Israeli settlers in the West Bank.Occupied by Israel since 1967, the West Bank is home to around three million Palestinians, as well as nearly half a million Israelis who live in settlements that are illegal under international law.”No Other Land,” despite winning a prestigious Oscar, has struggled to find distribution in the United States, screening at only a handful of cinemas.

Judge chides Trump admin over rushed deportation flights

President Donald Trump’s administration may have acted in “bad faith” and violated a court order with its deportation last month of alleged Venezuelan gang members to El Salvador, a US judge said Thursday.District Judge James Boasberg has issued a temporary restraining order barring the Trump administration from using an obscure wartime law to carry out rapid deportations.The federal judge held a hearing in a Washington courtroom Thursday to determine whether the government had complied with his orders or should be held in contempt.Trump’s administration has asked the Supreme Court to overturn the lower court’s order and allow for a resumption of the deportation flights under the 1798 Alien Enemies Act (AEA), which has only been used previously during the War of 1812, World War I and World War II.In invoking the act, Trump said he was targeting transnational gangs he had declared foreign terrorist organizations, including the Venezuelan group Tren de Aragua.But attorneys for several of the deported Venezuelans have said that their clients were not Tren de Aragua members, had committed no crimes and were targeted largely on the basis of their tattoos.On March 15, Boasberg ordered a halt to deportation flights under the wartime act, as two planes were headed to El Salvador. He also ordered that the planes be turned around, but they were not.The Alien Enemies Act was invoked on March 14 but not made public until the next day — when the deportations were already well underway — and Boasberg said at the hearing that this was an indication the administration may have “acted in bad faith.””If you really believed everything you did that day was legal and would survive a court challenge, you wouldn’t have operated the way you did,” the judge told Justice Department attorney Drew Ensign.Boasberg peppered Ensign with questions as he sought to determine whether a contempt finding was warranted.The judge said the Justice Department was aware he had called a hearing for 5:00 pm on March 15 to consider a lawsuit filed by rights groups seeking to halt the deportations.”Why wouldn’t the prudent thing be to say — ‘Let’s slow down here and see what the judge has to say?'” Boasberg asked.Ensign replied that he was not privy to the “operational details” of the deportations.The Justice Department has said previously that the planes were already en route to El Salvador and in international airspace when the judge issued his written order asking that they be turned around.The Trump administration has used images of the alleged gang members being shackled and having their heads shaved in the Central American prison as proof it is serious about cracking down on illegal immigration.In its appeal to the Supreme Court, acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris described the case as a key test of presidential authority over the courts.

Le Canada impose des droits de douane de 25% sur des importations auto américaines

Le Premier ministre canadien Mark Carney a annoncé jeudi des droits de douane de 25% sur certaines importations automobiles américaines, quelques heures après l’entrée en vigueur d’une taxe de même montant aux Etats-Unis sur tous les véhicules importés.Le tarif douanier canadien vise “tous les véhicules importés des Etats-Unis qui ne respectent pas” l’accord commercial nord-américain AEUMC, a annoncé M. Carney. Les droits de douane sur des importations de véhicules américains représentant une valeur de 35,6 milliards de dollars canadiens (25,3 milliards de dollars américains), devraient entrer en vigueur dans les prochains jours, a fait savoir son bureau à l’AFP.Les droits de douane canadiens auront une incidence sur les voitures et les camionnettes fabriquées avec moins de 75 % de pièces nord-américaines, soit environ 10 % de tous les véhicules expédiés des États-Unis vers le Canada, ce qui représente environ 67 000 véhicules par an.Le Canada a été épargné par la nouvelle vague de droits de douane annoncée mercredi par le président américain Donald Trump à l’encontre de la quasi-totalité des pays du monde, désormais confrontés à un tarif douanier d’au moins 10% sur toutes leurs ventes aux Etats-Unis.Mais Ottawa, premier partenaire commercial de Washington, est déjà visé par des droits de douane américains supplémentaires sur l’acier et sur l’aluminium, ainsi que sur les automobiles depuis jeudi matin.Dès l’entrée en vigueur de cette mesure, le constructeur automobile Stellantis, l’un des principaux constructeurs mondiaux, a annoncé une suspension de deux semaines de la production dans son usine canadienne de Windsor.La guerre commerciale déclenchée par le président des Etats-Unis “va provoquer une rupture dans l’économie mondiale”, a estimé M. Carney.”Le système commercial mondial ancré aux Etats-Unis et auquel le Canada s’était fié depuis la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale (…) n’existe plus”, a-t-il poursuivi.”La période de 80 ans pendant laquelle les Etats-Unis ont embrassé un rôle dirigeant dans l’économie mondiale, forgé des alliances fondées sur la confiance et le respect mutuel, et été les champions du libre-échange de biens et des services est terminée”, a affirmé le Premier ministre canadien.Ottawa a déjà imposé, en représailles, des droits de douane sur des biens de consommation américains d’une valeur de 30 milliards de dollars canadiens et sur des importations américaines d’acier et d’aluminium au Canada d’une valeur de 30 milliards de dollars canadiens.Lors d’un échange téléphonique la semaine dernière avec Donald Trump, M. Carney s’est mis d’accord avec le président américain pour discuter de l’avenir du commerce bilatéral après les élections législatives du 28 avril au Canada. Les produits canadiens et mexicains respectant les termes de l’accord AEUMC ne sont, à l’heure actuelle, pas visés par de nouvelles taxes. Tous les autres subissent jusqu’à 25% de droits de douane depuis mars.