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  1. supercyberlurker on

    Does he want a golden fucking medal for taking off the screw-us-tariff-tax *that he put on us?*

  2. holyhotdicks on

    Asking because I have no idea. Are any of the deals written and signed anywhere? With any mechanism of enforcement or tracking?

  3. mytinykitten on

    I’m assuming it’ll be the exact same „deal,“ but worse, that was in place before he took office?

  4. Blank_eye00 on

    Well played. What a reversal. India played it’s cards well. Was cornered last year. Then signed deals with UK, Australia, Oman, UAE, New Zealand, European Free Trade Association then EU. Made peace with China, reinvigorated BRICS and Non alignment. Step by step. Humbled the Americans.

  5. My2centsallday on

    An obvious panic agreement as many other countries are shifting trade from the u.s. to India

  6. -EU announces a massive free trade deal with India.

    TRUMP: „NUH UH! WE MADE A BIGGER AND BETTER DEAL! SOME MIGHT SAY THE BEST DEAL IN ALL OF EXISTANCE! PRESIDENT INDIA, WITH TEARS IN HIS EYES, TOLD ME IT’S THE BEST DEAL HE COULD EVER DREAM OF!“

    (Edit, EU, not UK)

  7. Damn this is like the 5th time he’s said he’s had a deal with India in the last year

  8. wrenchedups on

    Trump needed something before Carney’s planned meetings with India in March to discuss trade with Canada.

  9. nothing mentioned about tariffs due to the purchase of russian oil. so i think it’s 25+18 instead of 25+25. also i’ll wait for confirmation from the indian side as well. because trump is claiming that india has agreed to reduce the tariffs to „zero“. not so sure about that

  10. Euclidisthebomb on

    If you want to know the real benefit of having a trade deal with Trump just ask Canada which has one and still endures endless tariffs and tariff threats.

    Trump trade related statements have <0.000 value for the future.

  11. So I remember seeing interviews where the Indian side said the deal was already done in February, and Trump at first wasn’t satisfied, and later wanted to use tariffs as pressure for the nobel prize bs. And even towards the late 2025 they brought it up again, but he refused. Basically, no terms have changed since the deal from February. Let’s see what victory he claims when it’s done.

  12. yaaro_obba_ on

    Agriculture? I doubt the Indian govt would have opened up that sector. Anyhow, I’ll wait till the MEA puts out a statement. Even if they don’t, the Budget Session of the Parliament is going on now. The opposition parties would expect/pressure the govt ministers to speak up on this. Tomorrow is gonna be a fun day.

  13. sunnyspiders on

    Remember when international trade was tied to the literal moods of a rich and ignorant man placed there by the wealth of his parents and the tacit support of the ruling class?

    We called that kings and queens.

    America really wanted a king again apparently.

    Or maybe they just stoped holding the rich accountable to crimes entirely.

  14. He has not talked to any one –
    This just means he TACOed and signaling India to come back to make a deal.

  15. So, lower tariffs (18%) than the 50% he put on them earlier. So consumer costs are only increasing by 18% over the Biden administration.
    In return, India will consider to buy more oil from US and less from Russia (no exact quotas were mentioned in the article).
    India removed all tariffs from the US (so the US is imposing a „reciprocal“ 18% for no reason).

  16. pixelcowboy on

    Until 2 weeks from now, when they will get 300% because of something that an Indian politician tweeted.

  17. Sounds desperate to me. He sees India getting all these trade deals all of a sudden and wants to feel like he’s included.

  18. Cityplanner1 on

    Let me guess…is it the same trade deal that was in place before the orange turd came along?

  19. kuk1m0n5t3r on

    The US ranks low on global reputation & quality-of-life lists (often 20th–48th) despite its power. Top spots go to Switzerland, Canada, Nordics, Netherlands. Main reasons: weaker safety, healthcare access, inequality, trust in institutions, work-life balance, and recent drops in perceived global leadership.

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