UNCONSTITUTIONAL


Our Founding Fathers Rejected
FREE TRADE And So Should We


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Ambassador Jamieson Greer: Trade theory must catch up with tariffs, industrial policy, and the costs of globalization

Ambassador Jamieson Greer published an article in the June issue of the International Monetary Fund’s Finance & Development Magazine calling for the economics profession to revisit its assumptions and develop models that capture what matters to the real economy—including distributional consequences of trade, labor market dynamics, network and scale effects in manufacturing, effects of regulatory … Read More

Why Europe must embrace tariffs

Sorry folks, the rules aren’t coming to save you. Since the game has changed, so must the strategy. Which for the EU means turning to trade barriers — and tariffs. Europe’s challenge is both tumbling German industrial production since 2018 and, more recently, particularly soggy Euro area exports. No doubt expensive energy and cumbersome EU … Read More

EU Moves To Protect Antibiotics From Asian Dominance; Aligning More With U.S.

Lawmakers from member states of the European Union agreed to measures last week to stop drug shortages and fix chronic Asian dependencies for critical medicines, this time spurred by worries over the antibiotics supply chain. The move is part of last year’s Critical Medicines Act, but the real takeaway here is that Brussels and Washington … Read More

EU Moves To Protect Antibiotics From Asian Dominance; Aligning More With U.S.

Lawmakers from member states of the European Union agreed to measures last week to stop drug shortages and fix chronic Asian dependencies for critical medicines, this time spurred by worries over the antibiotics supply chain. The move is part of last year’s Critical Medicines Act, but the real takeaway here is that Brussels and Washington … Read More

EU paves way to finalise US trade deal and avoid Trump tariff hike

EU agrees on reinforced suspension provisions, sunset clause Trump threatened ‘much higher tariffs’ if EU duty cuts not implemented by July 4 USTR warns EU must also address non-tariff barriers Agreement should usher in cuts by end of June The European Union struck a provisional agreement on Wednesday on legislation to remove import duties on … Read More

U.S. slaps duties on fresh Canadian mushrooms over subsidy claims

The United States has put countervailing duties on fresh mushrooms grown in Canada following a U.S. Department of Commerce investigation which the Canadian industry has called “deeply flawed.” The change, posted in the federal register on Monday, will slap most fresh mushrooms with tariffs of 2.84 per cent. Two companies received separate duties: Champ’s Fresh … Read More

America’s AI Boom Has a Trade Policy Blind Spot

U.S. imports of data center equipment reached $653 billion in 2025, more than double their 2020 level. That total breaks into two distinct supply chains: nearly $580 billion in computing hardware (servers, chips, networking, cooling) and more than $70 billion in power infrastructure (transformers, switchgear, lithium-ion batteries). Tariffs and export controls have reshaped the first. … Read More

Shrimp trade war tensions ratcheted higher

Ecuador’s shrimp industry is urging its country’s government to implement retaliatory trade measures against Brazilian vehicle makers as part of efforts to overturn what producers describe as a “prolonged and unjustified blockade” of shrimp exports. “We have tried every possible avenue, and Brazil’s response has been a permanent blockade,” Jose Antonio Camposano, president of Ecuadorian … Read More

Tariff Changes Could Raise Deficits by $1.1 Trillion Over 10 Years: CBO

The Congressional Budget Office projects U.S. tariff changes will increase federal deficits by about $1.1 trillion over the next decade, after a Supreme Court ruling halted certain tariffs and the administration imposed new ones under different authority. The fiscal warning comes as USMCA renegotiations near, with advocacy groups calling for stronger labor and transparency rules … Read More

Tariffs Leave Consumers and Companies Splitting the Tab

US consumers absorbed up to 43% of the tariff burden after the first seven months of the new tariffs, with the remaining portion borne by US companies, according to estimates by the Harvard Business School Pricing Lab Tariff Tracker. While retail prices rose quickly following each levy announcement in 2025, they gradually leveled off through … Read More