John Rosenow climbed into a pickup truck in Zongolica, a small city in rural southern Mexico, squeezing into the front with several friends and relatives from Wisconsin
Trump, Minnesota
A Minnesota farmer worries about the price of fertilizer. A San Diego entrepreneur deals with an unexpected cost increase of remodeling a restaurant. A Midwestern sheet metal fabricator bemoans
After delaying proposed tariffs once, President Donald Trump has now implemented them on most goods from Canada and Mexico. They went into effect at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.
Two of America’s largest retailers, based in Minnesota, are warning prices will increase following President Donald Trump’s new tariffs on imported goods from Mexico, Canada and China.
Minnesota companies were assessing the damage Tuesday of the trade war between the U.S. and its three biggest trading partners, an escalating tit-for-tat that will affect billions of dollars in state imports and exports.
Farmers and meat producers across the U.S. can expect the new tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China and the retaliation to hurt their bottom lines by billions of dollars if they stay in place a while
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