Panama, BRICS & Birthright Citizenship False Claims | Vantage | Palki Sharma | N18G Donald Trump made a number of mistakes and false claims yesterday. Trump said that the US was the only country in the world to allow birthright citizenship.
President Donald Trump threatens 100% tariffs on BRICS nations over potential 'de-dollarisation' efforts. India balances ties with the US and BRICS while ensuring its economic and strategic interests are preserved.
As Trump confuses Spain for South Africa in BRICS, South Africans find humour in the blunder amid tariff warnings.
US President Trump, in a call with Prime Minister Modi, emphasised the importance of increasing India’s procurement of American-made security equipment and achieving a fair bilateral trade agreement.
At this pace, the newly inaugurated Republican president should be able to alienate just about every other country on the planet by, say, mid-summer.
Donald Trump has sniffed trouble brewing afar against the United States - one that may topple the US's position as a dominant global power and end Washington's ability to impose economic sanctions against those it deems fit for the case.
Donald Trump had a perfect opportunity to flaunt his purported “genius” brain and dealmaking prowess during a Monday press conference. And it didn’t go well.
Upon returning to office, U.S. President Donald Trump has launched numerous tariff threats. They range from broad ones - a universal tariff on foreign-imported goods - to ones aimed at specific sectors,
Days after returning to the White House for a second term, Trump said he would like to see “denuclearisation” and called for China to join the talks between Russia and the United States.
Economists say Trump’s second-term tariffs, if carried out as promised, could put even more downward pressure on the economy, because he’s framed them as across-the-board, rather than targeted to particular consumer products or commodities.
Traditionally, Republicans have (at least officially) promoted a laissez-faire approach to the economy that lets the market decide who wins and who loses. Influenced by thinkers such as the economist Friedrich Hayek, the orthodoxy considered centralized economic decision makers to be highly fallible.