Trump, Tariffs
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There is no single way to predict how businesses will price items weeks or months into the future as, in addition to tariffs, they are influenced by things like consumer demand, sales strategies, and supply chains.
The impacts of this year’s rapidly shifting tariff climate is wreaking havoc on small- and medium-sized businesses struggling to survive in the U.S., said the president of a family-owned
NEW YORK (AP) — With summer in full swing in the United States, retail executives are sweating a different season. It’s less than 22 weeks before Christmas, a time when businesses that make and sell consumer goods usually nail down their holiday orders and prices.
With summer at its peak in the US, retailers are bracing for a very different season — Christmas. Typically, companies finalise holiday orders and pricing by now, but President Donald Trump's unpredictable trade policies have thrown those plans into disarray.
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Small retailers say tariffs are affecting business - MSNSmall retailers say tariffs are affecting business. Story by Vinay Simlot • 1mo. T he Trump administration’s tariffs on Chinese goods affect the prices for strollers and car seats, ...
With the end of a U.S. tariff exemption for small parcels on May 2, some retailers have stopped selling to customers in the United States, while others are seeking temporary workarounds in the ...
President Trump's new tariffs are expected to take effect tomorrow. Small retailers are bracing for the impact. And, Trump denies reports of Laura Loomer's influence in yesterday's NSC firings.
Still, unable to absorb the cost of increased tariffs, both small- and medium-size businesses “disproportionately affected” by the tariffs have had to jack up their prices, causing Americans to face a $3,800 tax increase per household, according to an estimate from the National Retail Federation (NRF).
This article highlights the real challenges that small retailers, like Toodleydoo Toys and Stout’s Footwear, are facing due to newly imposed tariffs, especially on goods from China.
Gapen also said effects of the tariffs will be felt through 2025 and 2026 with the "tariff shock" being over in the second half of 2026. 'Another form of inflation, just spelled differently'