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President Donald Trump makes a special address remotely during the 55th annual World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 23, 2025.

REUTERS/Yves Herman

The Big Tar-iffs: Will he or won’t he start a trade war?


The big Trump tar-“iff” now has a when: Feb. 1.

That’s when the busy new US president has promised to slap 25% tariffs on both Canada and Mexico. In his virtual address to the folks attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday, President Donald Trump again singled out Canada for harsh treatment. “We have a tremendous deficit with Canada,” he said, reiterating his usual inaccurate tariff mantra. Trump claims the trade deficit is between US$200 and US$250 billion a year when it is significantly less than half of that, mainly due to energy exports.

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Jess Frampton

Carney looks like he will win a chance to lose

Unless some strange things happen, the next prime minister of Canada is likely to be an ambitious, high-achieving Albertan who made a mark on the world stage after excelling at Harvard and Oxford.

We don’t know yet whether that Albertan will be Mark Carney or Chrystia Freeland. But whoever becomes the Liberal Party leader on March 9 is unlikely to ever live in the official residence, because Justin Trudeau will probably still be packing boxes by the time his successor faces a different Albertan in an election.

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Paige Fusco

Graphic Truth: Which major economy has the lowest tariffs?

In the eight years since Donald Trump first arrived in the White House, US tariffs have risen considerably. During his first term, he imposed levies on tens of billions of dollars worth of goods from China and the EU to address perceived unfair practices by America’s main trade partners. (He also used tariffs to renegotiate the 1994 NAFTA free trade deal with Mexico and Canada, resulting in today’s USMCA.)
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Conservative Party of Canada leader Pierre Poilievre; Mark Carney, former Governor of the Banks of England and Canada; and Canada's former Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland.
Dylan Martinez/Patrick Doyle/Chris Wattie/Reuters

Can Liberals get a boost?

Before Trump makes a serious move on tariffs, Canadian Liberals are to choose a new leader, who will face Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre in an election soon after. At that point, Canadians will decide who should manage the country – and its difficult new relationship with its southern neighbor.

All the polls show Poilievre with a decisive lead, but issue polling is giving the Liberals faint hope that they might turn things around.

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President Donald Trump signs executive orders in the White House.

Fortune via Reuters

Trump uses uncertainty on tariffs for leverage

Canada and Mexico are preparing for a crushing economic blow after President Donald Trumpsaid Monday that he was “thinking in terms” of imposing 25% tariffs on both countries on Feb. 1, but that date may not be the one to watch.
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An Amazon warehouse in the Lachine neighborhood of Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on Jan. 22, 2025.

REUTERS/Peter McCabe

Hard Numbers: Amazon to close unionized Canadian facility, Pentagon sends troops to border, Quebec’s new AI infrastructure fund, Freeland abandons capital gains tax

1,700: On Wednesday, Amazon announced it will close all Quebec facilities in the next two months, cutting over 1,700 jobs and outsourcing deliveries to smaller contractors. The company claims the decision is for cost savings, not related to the recent unionization at its Laval warehouse — Quebec's only unionized Amazon workforce in Canada. The CSN union federation denounced the closure as nonsensical. Workers at the Laval facility, who were seeking a $26 per hour wage, received news of the closure through an email to their union lawyer.

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An aerial view of the Pasadena Refining System, Inc., in Pasadena, Texas, from 2017.

REUTERS/Adrees Latif

Why does the US Import oil despite producing enough for its needs?

The United States is one of the world’s largest oil producers, producing enough crude oil for domestic consumption and exporting millions of barrels daily. In 2023, it exported just over 10 million barrels per day, or b/d, of petroleum to 173 countries and three US territories.

Yet, the US also imports roughly 8 million b/d, mostly heavy crude,60% of which comes from Canada, up from 33% in 2013. US oil refining capacity stood at 18.4 million barrels per day (b/d) as of Jan. 1, 2024. This may seem counterintuitive, but there are several reasons why the US still relies on imports.

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Container ships in front of the port of Bremerhaven.

Sina Schuldt/dpa via Reuters Connect

How scared should the world be of Trump’s economic threats?

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump used his social media platform to threatenVladimir Putin with “high levels of Taxes, Tariffs, and Sanctions on anything being sold by Russia to the United States” unless he struck a bargain over Ukraine.

There’s just one problem: Russia has very little trade with the US. Americans imported just $2.8 billion in goods from Russia from Jan. to Nov. 2024, less than a tenth of the pre-war figure and less than 1% of all US imports over the same time period. The extensive sanctions already in place have hardly brought Moscow to its knees, and arguably benefited US rivals like China, Iran, and North Korea. It’s tough talk, but it’s not likely to push Putin to the table.

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