The International Monetary Fund has warned that US economic policies under incoming president Donald Trump could hit the rest of the world and ultimately backfire on the US. The IMF says a threatened wave of tariffs could make trade tensions worse,
The International Monetary Fund expects the world economy to grow a little faster and inflation to keep falling this year.
He wasn’t here in person, but The Donald dominated every conversation — and not always in a bad way, even given his America First agenda.
President Donald Trump’s ambitions for a reordering of world commerce are broader. The opposition — at home and abroad — is weaker. And the economic risks he seems prepared to run may be greater.
The U.S. economy will continue to be the developed world’s best performer in 2025 giving President-elect Donald Trump a running start on his plan to spur faster growth, the International Monetary Fund said.
Trump’s economic policies—such as tax cuts, deregulation, and restrictions on immigration—could drive inflation higher in the short term.
Trump to discuss crypto adoption with El Salvador’s Bukele, signaling rising global interest in Bitcoin and blockchain technology.
In 2024, the then-president of the US, Joe Biden, provided USD 16 million (Rs 138 crore) in civil aid to Pakistan.
But it warned that the outlook is clouded by President-elect Donald Trump’s promises ... boom-bust path.’’ Trump inherits a strong U.S. economy. The IMF expects U.S. growth to come in ...
Stellar (XLM) price climbed 12% to $0.43 on Thursday, adding over $1.5 billion to its market capitalization. Having often mirrored XRP’s movements, XLM’s market-leading performance on Monday signals intense speculative demand. Bullish traders hold $13 million in long positions, outpacing the $3 million total active shorts by nearly 70%.
By Mathew Cohen Argentina's President Javier Milei is working to establish an international ideological forum to combat what he calls a crumbling 'global hegemony' of left-wing politics, according to Argentine newspaper Perfil.
This would be an extraordinary escalation of a long-running dispute over how governments tax foreign companies. After years of negotiations 136 countries agreed in 2021 to establish a global minimum corporate tax,