Donald Trump’s decisive win of the US presidential election has world leaders already preparing for how his next administration will shape the global economy.In China, factories ramped up shipments ahead of Christmas holidays and likely in anticipation of worsening trade tensions.
U.S. voters’ decisive swing toward President-elect Donald Trump reflects dissatisfaction with recent inflation, as well as deeper fears about slipping financial security.
With his threat to impose tariffs on all imported goods, the rest of the world will have to learn how to better work together, without becoming too dependent on each other.
We came out of the Covid pandemic and then experienced the biggest inflation spike that most of us have seen in our lifetime. That takes a toll.
Dissatisfaction with the economy drove voters to the polls. And Donald Trump was viewed as the change candidate.
The U.S. presidential election result has ensured a sharp turn in economic policy expected to upend global commerce and diverge from decades of American norms.
CBS News polling showed that 45% of voters said their financial situation was worse today than it was four years ago.
President-elect Donald Trump’s plans for higher tariffs, lower taxes and more curbs on immigration are expected to reignite inflation but economic forecasters are divided over whether they’ll weaken or boost the U.S. economy in the near term.
Roughly two-thirds of voters rated the economy as “not so good” or “poor,” compared to just one-third who rated it as “excellent” or “good,” exit polls found.
Mark Cuban spun up a case for Pres.-elect Trump's policies hurting the economy "right now" even amid positive trends.
Advocates in Milwaukee believe the economy, combined with frustration over failures to implement immigration reform, is why some Latinos backed Trump.
The ripple effects of President-elect Donald Trump’s win are already being felt throughout the U.S. economy as, experts say, his policies could have mixed results. The ripple effects of President-elect Donald Trump’s win are already being felt ...