Trump's tariffs face Supreme Court test
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The window for U.S. importers to file for electronic refunds if the Supreme Court rules Trump's IEEPA tariffs are illegal is approaching.
The overall trade gap plunged 39% to $29.4 billion in October, as imports fell by 3.2%, Department of Commerce figures show. The deficit was significantly lower than the $58.4 billion median forecast from surveys of economists by Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
The government is speeding up its tariff-refund process as importers await a landmark Supreme Court decision on the Trump administration’s levies.
A Trump proposal could send $2,000 tariff checks to eligible Alabamians, but funding gaps and legal challenges raise uncertainty. Here's what we know.
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Import Costs, Tariff Pressures Suggest Turbulent 2026 For Shoe Firms, But Some Optimism Takes Hold
An FDRA survey of shoe executives on business expectations for 2026 indicate continued concern over trade policy.