Mexico and Canada are Wisconsin’s two largest trading partners, supporting a combined $25 billion in cross-border trade in 2023.
The U.S. can learn from the Chinese model. Strategic education, technology and infrastructure alignment will be critical to rebuilding its manufacturing base.
Global policymakers and Wall Street analysts have been bracing for massive trade barriers from the new Trump administration. But it focused more on the domestic front in the first week in power, leaving the global trade landscape largely unchanged.
Trump initially threatened 25% tariffs against Canada and Mexico in November, but that was initially assumed to be a bargaining tactic and the leaders of both countries rushed to assure him they would beef up border security.
WASHINGTON – What is it going to take to convince US President Donald Trump not to press ahead with his threat of tariffs on America’s top three trade partners – Mexico, Canada and China? A video might help. Preferably on Fox News.
The Trump administration could soon implement tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico, impacting the U.S. and Wisconsin's top three trade partners.
As Trump’s announced tariffs show, the U.S. has the tools and leverage to compel China and Mexico to shut down these operations. Doing this would strike a decisive blow: once these operations ...
A brief standoff with Colombia holds important lessons for how future trade conflicts might unfold in the new Trump administration.
“This is the best time to settle in Mexico,” says a brochure for a manufacturing complex called Puerto Verde. “The nearshoring effect and the trade war between the US and China are creating ...
With less than 24 hours before President Donald Trump's deadline to impose sweeping tariffs on the three biggest US trading partners -- Canada, Mexico and China -- the global economy is bracing for impact.
President Donald Trump's nominee to run the Commerce Department, Howard Lutnick, said on Wednesday that Canada and Mexico can avoid looming U.S. tariffs if they act swiftly to close their borders to fentanyl,