Wall Street Journal (November 26)
“Trump’s promise to impose 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico and an additional 10% on Chinese imports on the first day of his presidency could lead to higher prices, just as the country appears to be turning a corner on inflation.” Economists at Yale’s Budget Lab calculated that these tariffs, combined with the three countries’ expected retaliatory measures, “would raise U.S. consumer prices by 0.75% next year,” which would “amount to more than $1000 in lost purchasing power per household.”
Tags: $1000, Canada, China, Consumer prices, Economists, Imports, Inflation, Mexico, Purchasing power, Retaliatory measures, Tariffs, Trump, U.S., Yale
Fortune (March 20)
“More than 30 companies are ‘digging in,’ defying public demands to exit Russia or reduce their activities in the pariah state.” The list compiled by Yale’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld has been revised with five categories to better capture corporate presence in Russia: “withdrawal,” “suspension,” “scaling back,” “buying time,” and “digging in.” Included in the final category are “AstraZeneca, Credit Suisse, Emirates Airlines, Koch Industries, SC Johnson, and Subway, which has nearly 450 franchise locations in the country.”
Tags: 30 companies, AstraZeneca, Credit Suisse, Digging in, Emirates Airlines, Exit, Koch Industries, Pariah state, Public demands, Reduce, Russia, SC Johnson, Sonnenfeld, Subway, Yale
Boston Globe (July 9)
“For the first time since 1944, Harvard and Yale will not meet on the gridiron, ending a string of 136 consecutive editions of the storied rivalry game.” In what could be precedent setting, the Ivy League determined “that its schools will not be participating in the fall sports season as the country continues to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic.”
Tags: COVID-19, Fall sports, Gridiron, Harvard, Ivy League, Precedent, Rivalry, Storied, Yale
