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Al Jazeera on MSNFact check: Did US go from ice cream trade surplus to deficit under Biden?
Trump administration says increased imports from Italy under former President Joe Biden changed the ice cream game.
US President Donald Trump and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen shake on it after "tough negotiations" in Scotland.
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Al Jazeera on MSNFact check: Could Trump’s trade tariffs pay off the US deficit?
In June 2025, the most recent monthly data available, the federal government took in $27bn in tariffs, according to the Treasury Department. A year earlier, that figure was $6bn. That’s an increase of ...
Two projections show that the Trump administration's tariff revenues would not cover the next 10 years of projected deficits ...
Higher tariffs would adversely affect agricultural imports, which would harm US consumers, but the trade actions could also provoke counter-retaliatory actions by affected exporters. Indeed, Canada, ...
The office of the U.S. Trade Representative purported a summertime scoop: "America had a trade surplus in ice cream in 2020 under President Trump's leadership, but that surplus turned into a trade ...
The dollar index (DXY00 ) is down by -0.20% and posted a 3-1/4 year low. The dollar remains under pressure on uncertainties over US trade policies with many nations trying to negotiate trade deals ...
The dollar index (DXY00) on Tuesday fell by -0.13%. The dollar on Tuesday added to Monday's losses and posted a 3-1/3 year low. The dollar remains under pressure due to uncertainties over US trade ...
The U.S. deficit with China increased to $29.1 billion in September. It is running 6.8 percent ahead of last year s record pace. America s deficit with China last year was the highest imbalance ever ...
The Treasury Department reported on Friday that the budget shortfall increased by $64 billion to $1.3 trillion in the first nine months of the fiscal year ...
The US trade deficit widened more than expected in May, with both imports and exports declining as US President Donald Trump's tariffs sent shock waves through the economy and snagged supply chains.
Banking titan Goldman Sachs believes the US dollar's poor performance over the last few months is just the beginning of a downtrend that will likely last for years.
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