Trump’s Tariffs: How Will Global Trade Adapt in 2025?
Trump’s tariffs are injecting uncertainty into global trade patterns, which could become more complex, fragmented and regionalised in 2025.
Trump’s tariffs are injecting uncertainty into global trade patterns, which could become more complex, fragmented and regionalised in 2025.
Analysis by ANDAMAN PARTNERS Co-Founder Rachel Wu on changing patterns in global supply chains.
Now is the time to form a comprehensive view of China’s role in the resources sector and to become more — not less — strategically engaged.
ANDAMAN PARTNERS Co-Founder Rachel Wu welcomes you to Mining Indaba 2025.
China is still China: the world’s largest resource consumer and a critical and unavoidable player in the global mining industry.
Foreign-invested enterprises played a key role in making China the world’s largest exporter, but since 2007, China’s trade has shifted precipitously to self-reliance.
In recent years there has been a direct correlation between population and economic growth.
China is for several years already the world’s leading producer of cars, and it looks set to soon become the world’s leading exporter of cars as well.
Australia’s highly specialized export profile can be a source of risk and opportunity in a changing global trade context.