The economist and Times Opinion columnist Paul Krugman details the president-elect’s “seriously inflationary” economic plans.
Expelling noncitizens on a mass scale is likely to raise prices on goods and services and lower employment rates for U.S.
The United States is the biggest trading partner for the European Union and Britain, whose economies could be at risk from ...
Cuba is unlikely to see any growth in 2024, Economy Minister Joaquin Alonso said on Thursday, as its already sputtering state ...
Pod Save America' host Jon Favreau and New York Times columnist Ezra Klein, host of 'The Ezra Klein Show,' talk through what ...
Consumer sentiment among Republicans has soared to its highest point since Donald J. Trump left the White House, while ...
President-elect Donald J. Trump often says he prefers a weaker dollar, but economists and investors think his proposed ...
A strong economy is giving Federal Reserve officials room to move “carefully” as they lower interest rates, the central bank ...
Some fiscal hawks worry that Trump’s policies would increase the deficit and fuel inflation.
The election of Donald Trump will affect trade, technology and the environment — none of it in good ways, writes columnist ...
The Chinese economy is more dependent on exports, making tariffs more potent, yet it’s less reliant on American markets and ...
The bad news: The reason I say that is I believe that a trade war would be coming even if Trump had lost the election, ...