A sweeping new U.S. tariff on products made in China is expected to increase the prices American consumers pay for a wide array of products.
The U.S. postal service is reversing course a day after it said it would not accept packages from China and Hong Kong. The ...
The Postal Service gave no reason for the reversal, but said it would work with Customs and Border Protection to implement a ...
The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) announce it will resume accepting packages from China and Hong Kong, reversing course after ...
The U.S. Postal Service reversed course Wednesday, saying it would continue to accept all inbound mail and packages from ...
The U.S. Postal Service announced a temporary suspension of "international package acceptance of inbound parcels from China and Hong Kong" until further notice.
The U.S. Postal Service has temporarily suspended inbound packages from China and Hong Kong, citing recent trade policy ...
The change comes after President Donald Trump announced new tariffs that also target a popular trade loophole, called “de minimis.” ...
Beijing announced tariffs of 10% to 15% on U.S. coal, liquefied natural gas, crude oil, pickup trucks and other products shortly after the U.S. tariff took effect.
China countered President Donald Trump’s across-the-board tariffs on Chinese products with tariffs on select U.S. imports, as ...
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