Trump’s Tariffs Could Deal a Blow to Boeing and the Aerospace Industry
Aerospace companies are big exporters but also very reliant on a global supply chain, making them vulnerable.
It Is Happening Every Day, Every Where
Aerospace companies are big exporters but also very reliant on a global supply chain, making them vulnerable.
President Trump and his advisers say his policies may cause short-term pain but will produce big gains over time. Many economists are skeptical of those arguments.
Energy executives meeting in Houston expressed concerns about President Trump’s trade and economic policy even as they praised him and his administration.
The president offers many reasons for imposing tariffs, including revenue, leverage over competitors and job creation. But history suggests a more complex history.
The added capacity for the year was the most from any single source in more than two decades.
President Trump’s stiff tariffs on Mexico and Canada could push those allies into recession. The impact for America could be messy.
President Trump has offered a confusing mix of reasons for upending global trade relations, leaving America’s biggest trading partners baffled and angry.
The investment plan, announced at the White House, was made as the Trump administration pushes to bring chip making back to the United States.
Tariffs, if they are imposed, could boost U.S. production of a valuable resource but also raise costs for automakers, construction companies and others.
With the Trump administration reversing support for low-carbon power, the business case for making wind, solar and electric vehicle parts gets weaker.