American and European chambers of commerce report that foreign companies in China have been hurt by earlier tariff hikes.
Several dozen rebel MPs have discussed attempting to trigger a no-confidence vote in May.
Weak economic fundamentals, not blind investor panic, has driven a summer of currency crises.
In the aftermath of Britain's vote to leave the EU in June 2016, many experts had warned that Britain's financial services industry would see hefty job losses.
Official figures show UK wages climbing for first time in six months and a record number of job vacancies.
The "new line" of putting economic development first has been Kim's top priority this year.
A recent opinion poll shows Putin's approval ratings crashed this summer following the announcement of the pension reform
China said it is ready to impose retaliatory tariffs on $60 billion worth of U.S. goods if that happens.
Worry that big losses in some developing markets could ripple out into the global financial system.
Trade gap with the EU shot up 50 percent to a record $17.6 billion and with Canada nearly 58 percent to $3.1 billion.
Boris Johnson, who resigned as foreign secretary after feuding with May over Brexit, used his column in the Daily Telegraph to accuse May of surrendering to the EU.
The new east-west London railway - named the Elizabeth line - has cost around £15 billion.
The Kaiowá and Guarani have no access to drinkable water, no protection from agro-chemical contamination, and no adequate conditions for planting, hunting or fishing.
Germany is operating at full employment, with the jobless rate only 3.4 percent. Others such as Spain and Italy have double-digit unemployment rates.
May is the latest in a long line of prime ministers who have evoked the potential of "Africa" for their own political purposes.
South Sudan's economy is almost entirely dependent on exports of oil from its 3.5 billion barrels of reserves.
Britain's Brexit minister Dominic Raab said he was "stubbornly optimistic" that there would be agreement.
Donald Trump's economic gamble with trade wars and tax cuts – he could win big or lose everything.
Beijing is responding to President Donald Trump's tariff hikes by pushing companies to trade more with other countries.
Over 90 percent of economists surveyed said they think the Trump administration's current and threatened tariffs will harm the economy.
Turkey is the proverbial canary in the coal mine - a local manifestation of global problems and an indication of looming ones as well.
Ankara will impose extra tariffs on imports of rice, vehicles, alcohol, coal and cosmetics.
Germany's economy, Europe's biggest, grew by 0.5 percent compared with the previous three-month period.
The Turkish lira tumbled another 7 percent as the central bank's measures failed to restore investor confidence.
Warmer weather fueled UK construction and consumer spending after snow and ice curtailed activity in March.
A weak currency, high borrowing, and conflict with the Trump administration point to long-term economic problems for Turkey.
Trump administration announced it would go ahead with previously announced 25 percent tariffs on an additional $16 billion of Chinese imports.
It's up to Europeans to decide who they want to trade with, says European Union foreign policy chief.
Brussels have expressed fear that British producers will start exploiting previously protected European food names.
Bloomberg News reported the Trump administration would propose imposing 25 percent tariffs on a $200 billion list of Chinese goods.