David Brancaccio
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Economist Julia Coronado, Macro Policy Perspectives.
Thank you very much.
My pleasure.
The prime minister of Spain has plans for his government to give legal status to about half a million migrants who are in Spain illegally.
The move is designed to boost the country's workforce in economic sectors that have been growing but have struggled to recruit workers.
The BBC's Ashish Sharma reports from Madrid.
Ashish Sharma is with our newsroom partners, the BBC.
It's the Marketplace Morning Report from APM American Public Media.
A new data-driven analysis finds immigrants are a net positive for the U.S.
Treasury.
I'm David Brancaccio in Los Angeles.
First, we're coming up on 72 hours since the Supreme Court determined the Trump administration did not have legal authority for a sweeping package of tariffs.
These were the ones imposed unilaterally and globally using the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEPA.
But this ruling does not apply to all import taxes, and the president at first said he'll now apply a 10 percent global tariff, then raised his number to 15 percent.
Here's Marketplace's Mitchell Hartman.
Companies and consumers will have to figure out if they'll sue to get money back for money paid on tariffs deemed illegal.
And U.S.
trading partners around the world are also recalculating strategy.
The BBC's Felicity Hanna has more.
Immigrants to the United States of all economic classes collectively put more into the United States than they cost.