CNET's Daily Tariff Price Tracker: What Trump's Plans Are Doing to 11 Key Products
- In January 2025, President Donald Trump resumed his role at the White House and introduced a series of new tariffs aimed at a wide range of imported goods.
- Trump aimed to reverse decades of open trade policy by building a tariff wall to protect American industry and attract manufacturing back.
- He imposed tariffs under laws like Section 232, Section 301, and invoked IEEPA emergency powers, prompting legal challenges questioning his authority.
- A federal trade court found the IEEPA tariffs exceeded presidential authority and declared them unlawful, but a higher court permitted the government to keep enforcing the tariffs while the legal challenges continue.
- Tariff collections surged to about $22 billion by May 2025, raising concerns about price increases and ongoing uncertainty for businesses and markets.
13 Articles
13 Articles


Trump claims that tariffs will protect U.S. industry, bring factories back to the U.S., and raise money for the federal government.

Answering your questions about President Trump's tariffs
President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January determined to overturn decades of American policy and build a tariff wall around a U.S. economy that used to be pretty much wide open to foreign products.
Uncertainty about Trump's tariffs affecting tech sales
Uncertainty about President Donald Trump’s announced trade tariffs is affecting global forecasts for sales of PC and smartphones . Sales of PCs and tablets are expected to increase despite the uncertainty while worldwide shipments of smartphones are downgraded. Global PC sales is expected to be up 4.1% compared to last year while global sales of smartphones is forecasted to grow no more than 0.6% compared to an earlier forecast showing growth of…
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