Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology
“Canada-U.S. Travel Drops to Lowest Level Since COVID Pandemic”
By: Rochester First – April 18, 2025
“We’re going to be losing out in a variety of ways. So, Canadian shoppers who often frequent our so-called outlet malls. You’re going to see a basic freeze of Canadian shoppers shopping at our outlet malls and in our retail establishments. This is clearly a protest movement on the part of many Canadians and it’s having a huge negative impact in the U.S. because all of those tourism dollars would have been spent in different tourist spots here. Those dollars are going to other locations and nations.”
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Wendong Zhang, Cornell University
“Canadian Tourism to Syracuse Hit By Tariffs and Economic Uncertainty”
By: CNY Central - March 17, 2025
“The impact of tariffs. "I think that overall, that we're hoping to see that this is not a permanent shock. If it is a permanent shock, then this essentially means that purchasing some of the products that you would normally buy in from Syracuse for Canadian citizens would be more costly," Zhang said. He warned that this could lead to "potentially further damage and long-term market loss for some of the malls and the shops in Syracuse and other parts of upstate New York."
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Steven Deller, University of Wisconsin-Madison
“Trump’s Tariffs and Wisconsin’s Economy”
By: Wisconsin Watch – April 21, 2025
“Economists don’t agree on anything except for tariffs. You put a hundred economists in the room, and you ask them are tariffs a good policy — and 99 of them are going to tell you, no. This is bad policy. At least the way that Trump is doing it. Everybody loses.”
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Dawn Thilmany, Colorado State University
“What’s Working: Trump Told Farmers and Ranchers to “Have Fun” With His Cuts and Tariffs. They Aren’t”
By: Colorado Sun – April 18, 2025
“The administration’s change comes from a perception that the climate smart commodities program had too much overhead and the fact that all grants had to have a government partner, a university partner and an industry partner.
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Andrew Muhammad, University of Tennessee
“Tariffs Are Already Hurting Tequila Producers And Importers”
By: Forbes – April 22, 2025
“Companies need stability in supply chains, and they need stability in trade policy. This type of uncertainty that says at any given moment your product can face not just tariffs, but tariffs out of nowhere at the whim of leadership, it makes you say, ‘Well, the European market is stable, and maybe their customers will be willing to pay this extra price for transport.”
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Daniel Sumner, University of California, Davis
“How Trump Tariffs Could Upend California Farms, Wine Businesses and Ports”
By: Santa Monica Daily Press – April 24, 2025
“In addition, the uncertainty itself has had damage, even though we (may not) get the tariffs. California and other producers of agricultural products want to be able to tell customers they’re reliable suppliers. But you can’t do that if prices can go up. That’s a real problem.”
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Nicholas Piggott, North Carolina State University
“Soybean Prices Set to Remain Low Until Supply Overhang Works Off”
By: Country Folks – April 23, 2025
“From 2022 to 2023 there was a big drop-off in cash receipts for soybean producers. In 2024 livestock producers were doing better than crop producers. In fact, ending stocks of soybeans were 11% higher at the end of 2024 than at the end of 2023. It’s simple demand and supply: the reason soybean prices are down significantly is because we have plenty of beans around the world.”
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David Ortega, Michigan State University
- “Trump’s
Tariffs Are Coming for Your Chili Crisp”
By: The Atlantic – April 24, 2025 - “Tomatoes
Become One of the First Everyday Casualties of Trade War”
By: The Wall Street Journal – April 18, 2025
Amitrajeet Batabyal, Rochester Institute of Technology
“President Trump Says His Tariffs Will Shrink the Trade Deficit. Will They?”
By: Medium – April 25, 2025
“President Trump’s on-again, off-again tariffs have caused a considerable amount of chaos in world markets. Although economists have criticized his tariffs for being poorly thought through and incoherently calculated, it is important to ask what the objective of these tariffs are.”
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Read more on: Medium
Rabail Chandio, Iowa State University
"Land Values Level off As Farm Incomes Drop"
By: Iowa Farmer Today - April 18, 2025
“The plateauing of land values from 2023 are now on a modest decline, with most counties and regions experiencing a relatively small adjustment in land values. The downward pressures on land values are largely attributable to persistently high interest rates over the last couple of years, lower commodity prices, increasing input prices and weather uncertainty.”
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