The United States escalated a tariff war with China on Friday by hiking levies on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods.
This amounts to about $ 300 billion. This is in addition to the Chinese imports worth $200 billion on which Trump increased the import duty from 10% to 25%, beginning Friday
US tariff increase on Chinese goods takes effect as officials of both countries start second day of talks.
The Trump administration on Friday increased tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese products from 10 per cent to 25 per cent
The hike comes in the midst of two days of talks between top US and Chinese negotiators to try to rescue a faltering deal aimed at ending a 10-month trade war
China, the world's second-largest economy, has some markets levers it can pull to escalate the battle
The poll was conducted between March 10-28 across 17 countries
Donal Trump says he believed it was possible to reach a deal this week on trade dispute with China.
The commerce ministry spokesman said China is prepared to respond to all possible outcomes
The exports are expected to increase from Rs 26,300 cr in FY19 to Rs 30,000 cr in FY20.
Trump's comments fueled a round of selling in Asian markets. Beijing has announced it would retaliate if tariffs rise
The US and China are locked in a trade war since Trump imposed heavy tariffs on imported steel and aluminium items from China
The world's two leading economies face a possible make-or-break moment when top negotiators meet in Washington this week following months of fraught talks
For us at the IMF, it's imperative that trade tensions are resolved in a way satisfying for everyone, Christine Lagarde said
Slowdown in global growth and trade is likely to dent GDP growth in India as well, with analysts at Nomura expecting it to slow to 6.8% in FY19
Trump has insisted that China has picked up the tab for his tariff campaign, not American consumers
Most economists view lower tariffs as a win for the US economy, even if China doesn't reciprocate
Buffett's conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway Inc owns or invests in many companies that do business in China, including Apple Inc, in which it has a more than $50-billion stake
A spate of country-specific events will also divert market participants from their obsession with the dollar this week
Billionaire Terry Gou, who said last month he would run for president of Taiwan in 2020, met Trump last week to discuss the status of the Taiwan company's planned investment in Wisconsin