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The IMF leader warned that the economic fallout from trade conflict would fall most heavily on poor countries.
The World Bank has slashed its 2025 economic growth forecast for Mexico, predicting stagnation amid trade uncertainty.
Supply Lines is a daily newsletter that tracks global trade. Sign up here.Most Read from BloombergTrump Gives New York ‘One Last Chance’ to End Congestion FeeWhy Car YouTuber Matt Farah Is Fighting ...
He wants to reconnect to Bretton Woods but shrinks from addressing the central feature of the Bretton Woods System ...
The European Union and United States are far from reaching a deal on tariffs, France's economy minister said Thursday, as the ...
The bank’s International Development Association provides grants and lends money on highly concessional terms to the world’s ...
In the midst of this global buzz in Washington, Okpebholo’s mission and those of his economists who were in attendance are ...
The <a href=" Bank projected that Peru's economic growth will maintain a favorable trend this year and would rise by 2.9% in 2025, thereby recording the third-highest expansion among South American ...
Americans’ trust in President Donald Trump to bolster the U.S. economy appears to be faltering, with a new poll showing that many people fear the country is being steered into a recession and that the ...
NEW DELHI (AP) — A deadly attack on tourists in Indian-controlled Kashmir has again moved India and Pakistan closer to war as the two rivals downgraded diplomatic and trade ties, closed the main ...
The world economy is at a pivotal juncture. At the center are shifting policy priorities by major economies and escalating trade tensions, in the face of high public debt, weak medium-term growth ...