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Trump threatened a 50% tariff against Brazil, one of the U.S.’s largest suppliers of green coffee beans, starting Aug. 1.
Hawaiian coffee farmers have a message for President Donald Trump: Steep tariffs on major exporters such as Brazil will end ...
Hawaiian coffee growers aren’t buying Trump’s trade war strategy. They’re straight up telling him: these tariffs won’t help ...
With Brazil’s dominance in arabica bean production, U.S. roasters have few alternatives for a different exporter.
Let’s look at coffee as a prime example of how tariffs affect us Coon cited that in 2023, the U.S. imported $7.85 billion worth of coffee.
Coffee beans need to grow in a warm, tropical climate, making Hawaii and Puerto Rico the only suitable places in the United States to farm the crop. But, as the world’s top consumer of coffee ...
Some owners of small businesses dealing in coffee and confections say they fear the tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump will leave them with no choice but to pass the added costs on to their ...
While the reality of tariff-driven inflation is arriving in earnest, the worst of it might still be a ways off.
President Donald Trump's current 10% tariffs cover most coffee-producing countries, including Brazil, Ethiopia and Colombia, and are expected to drive up costs for Americans.