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ToplineTrump’s so-called reciprocal tariffs are scheduled to go into effect on August 1 after a 90-day delay—just as American ...
As the first day of school approaches for many, consumers are bracing for a financial hit due to impending tariffs set to take effect this Friday.
A National Retail Federation survey finds more back-to-school shoppers are starting early this year, and tariff concerns are ...
School staples like backpacks, lunchboxes, pencils, tech accessories, and even glue sticks are particularly vulnerable, as ...
Alive News "tariff trackers" and investigative reporters shopped at metro Atlanta stores to see if prices have changed.
Back-to-school shopping is starting earlier than usual this year, as families scramble to buy supplies before new tariffs ...
Four in five shoppers said they were planning their shopping around July back-to-school sales to maximize their budgets, the NRF report found. Retailers focus on sales With inflation and tariffs ...
President Trump boasted this week that his tariffs are raising "a fortune" for the U.S. government. Tariffs could also raise prices for the back-to-school and Christmas shopping seasons.
According to a report by Coresight Research, 62% of shoppers say they'll begin back-to-school shopping before August, up over 8 percentage points from last year.
More than half of back-to-school shoppers say they are starting their shopping early this year because they worry that tariffs will push prices higher, according to a survey by the National Retail ...
Consumers start to feel impact of Trump’s tariffs as businesses wrestle with prices: ‘A horrible decision by our government’ By Jim Puzzanghera Globe Staff,Updated July 10, 2025, 6:00 a.m.