Category: Business

  • LG electric ranges tied to over a dozen fires, pet deaths recalled

    LG electric ranges tied to over a dozen fires, pet deaths recalled

    Hundreds of thousands of LG Electric Ranges have been recalled after they were tied to more than two dozen fires, according to safety regulators. 

    The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) on Friday announced that 500,000 LG Slide-In Ranges and Freestanding Ranges with front-mounted knobs were recalled after officials discovered that the front-mounted knobs on the recalled ranges could be activated accidentally by humans or pets, posing a fire hazard.

    The recall was initiated after the CPSC received nearly 90 reports of unintentional activation of the front-mounted knobs. The ranges had also been involved in more than 28 fires, five of which “caused extensive property damage” that amounted to more than $340,000, according to the agency.  

    Since hitting the market in 2015, at least eight minor injuries have been reported, which includes burns. There have also been reports of three fires which involved a pet dying, the CPSC said. 

    HONDA RECALLS NEARLY 295K HONDA, ACURA VEHICLES FOR RISK OF ENGINE STALL, POWER LOSS

    A shot of one of the recalled LG electric ranges, Model LDE4411. (CPSC)

    In August 2024, more than 1 million slide-in electric ranges manufactured by Samsung Electronics America Inc. and sold at major stores nationwide since 2013 were recalled for the same reason. The ranges were also involved in hundreds of reported fires, according to the CPSC’s notice.

    The products were sold at appliance stores nationwide, including at Best Buy, Costco, Home Depot and Lowe’s. It was also sold online at LG.com. Depending upon the model, the ranges were sold from 2015 through January 2025. 

    Consumers with the affected electric ranges are urged to keep children and pets away from the knobs, to check the range knobs to ensure they are off before leaving home or going to bed, and not to leave objects on the range when the range isn’t being used. 

    They also need to contact LG for a waning label that would remind consumers to use the Lock Out/Control Lock function on the range control panel to disable activation of the heating elements when the range is not in use, the CPSC said.

    LAY’S RECALL OF CLASSIC CHIPS IN 2 STATES CLASSIFIED AT HIGHEST RISK LEVEL, FDA WARNS IT COULD CAUSE ‘DEATH’

    Ingredients for soup begin to simmer on an electric stove in Santa Ana on Monday, April 3, 2023.  (Leonard Ortiz/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images) / Getty Images)

    LG said in a statement that this isn’t the typical product recall given that the affected products already have a proven safety feature built in. The company said it is reminding consumers about the unique safety function called “Lock Out” or “Control Lock” available on LG electric ranges with front-mounted knobs since 2015.

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    The company said the Control Lock/Lock Out function locks the cooktop heating elements from being turned on even when the knob is turned.

    The company is also conducting a broader kitchen safety campaign to educate consumers.

  • Trump admin hits brakes on B electric vehicle charging station program

    Trump admin hits brakes on $5B electric vehicle charging station program

    The Federal Highway Administration pumped the brakes on a program to dole out funds to states for electric vehicle charging infrastructure.

    The move regarding the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) program comes less than a month into President Donald Trump’s second term in office.

    In a letter to state Department of Transportation directors dated Feb. 6., Emily Biondi, associate administrator for the Office of Planning, Environment and Realty, discussed the move.

    LOS ANGELES FIRE CLEANUP COMPLICATED BY ‘UNPRECEDENTED’ NUMBER OF EVS WITH COMBUSTIBLE LITHIUM-ION BATTERIES

    The Federal Highway Administration is pumping the brakes on a program to dole out funds to states for electric vehicle charging infrastructure. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images | Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images)

    “The new leadership of the Department of Transportation (U.S. DOT) has decided to review the policies underlying the implementation of the NEVI Formula Program. Accordingly, the current NEVI Formula Program Guidance dated June 11, 2024, and all prior versions of this guidance are rescinded,” Biondi noted.

    “As result of the rescission of the NEVI Formula Program Guidance, FHWA is also immediately suspending the approval of all State Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Deployment plans for all fiscal years. Therefore, effective immediately, no new obligations may occur under the NEVI Formula Program until the updated final NEVI Formula Program Guidance is issued and new State plans are submitted and approved,” the letter indicated.

    AUTOMAKERS THAT PUSHED BACK EV GOALS AND PLANS IN 2024

    Presidents Trump and Biden

    Then-President-elect Donald Trump and then-President Joe Biden attend Trump’s inauguration in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda on Jan. 20, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Saul Loeb – Pool/Getty Images)

    The $5 billion program was included in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which then-President Joe Biden signed in 2021.

    “Instructions for the submission of new State plans for all fiscal years will be included in the updated final NEVI Formula Program Guidance. Since FHWA is suspending the existing State plans, States will be held harmless for not implementing their existing plans. Until new guidance is issued, reimbursement of existing obligations will be allowed in order to not disrupt current financial commitments,” Biondi’s letter notes.

    ELECTRIC VEHICLES ARE ‘DIRECT WEALTH TRANSFER’ FROM OWNERS OF GAS-POWERED VEHICLES TO EV OWNERS, EXPERTS SAY

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    Fox News Digital reached out to request comment from the Federal Highway Administration on Friday.

  • Food deals abound for Super Bowl: what chains are offering

    Food deals abound for Super Bowl: what chains are offering

    Many football fans are looking to munch on food during the upcoming Super Bowl between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles, whether its snacks made at home or grub from restaurants.

    Those hoping to get food from restaurants – and save some money – for the Big Game will be in luck because a slew of well-known chains have deals for Super Bowl Sunday or the Monday after it. 

    NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA – FEBRUARY 03: A detail shot of the Lombardi Trophy next to Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles helmets prior to a news conference on February 03, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana ahead of the NFL Super Bowl LIX football g (Michael Owens/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    There are a slew of chicken wing deals, in particular. 

    Checkers & Rally’s restaurants will offer $1 bone-in wings for customers buying five, ten or 20 pieces “while supplies last” on Super Bowl Sunday. The promotion will be available in-store and for order-ahead, according to an Instagram post from the company.

    At participating Applebee’s, football fans can plug in the promo code “SBWINGS25” on game day to get 20 free boneless wings with $40 orders placed via the chain’s website or app. The chain had over 1,500 locations across the U.S. as of the end of September.  

    Applebee's sign

    A view of an Applebee’s restaurant sign and logo. (Photo by Paul Weaver/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) (Paul Weaver/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    DURING SUPER BOWL LIX, FANS WILL EAT A STAGGERING AMOUNT OF CHICKEN WINGS

    Another chain – Outback Steakhouse – will also have a Super Bowl wing deal. The promotion, only available on Sunday, will be 59 wings for $59, according to the company.

    A whopping 1.47 billion chicken wings are expected to be gobbled up by Super Bowl fans during Sunday’s match-up between the Eagles and Chiefs, the National Chicken Council forecasted. 

    Super Bowl food deals won’t be limited to chicken wings, however. 

    In anticipation of the Big Game, Pizza Hut rolled out an “Ultimate Hut Bundle” consisting of two medium pizzas, eight boneless wings and breadsticks with two dips. It carries a $24.99 price tag. 

    Meanwhile, Papa John’s is “offering our XL NY Style pizza for just $11.99 to all Super Bowl fans, including those who tune in just for the halftime show,” a spokesperson told FOX Business. 

    Papa John's

    Papa John’s International Inc. signage is displayed on top of a delivery vehicle outside of the company’s restaurant in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S., on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2017. Papa John’s is scheduled to release earnings figures on February 21. Photog (Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Mexican fast-food chain Chipotle, known for its burritos and bowls, said late last month that it will hold a “special activation” during the Super Bowl that “will reward up to 50,000 free entrees to fans” through “text-to-claim” codes it will post on X and Instagram. 

    The codes for the free entrees will go up on those social media sites when “extra” events like the team on offense converting on a fourth down or scoring a two-point conversion take place during the game, according to Chipotle.  

    SUPER BOWL LIX BATTLE: CHIEFS AND EAGLES ARE BOTH VALUED IN THE BILLIONS

    The day after the Super Bowl, Chipotle will also have a promo code “EXTRA25” that will enable rewards members to receive complimentary guacamole and queso blanco if they buy an entree from its app or website. 

    Chipotle restaurant

    A Chipotle restaurant in New York, US, on Tuesday, July 11, 2023. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. is scheduled to release earnings figures on July 26. Photographer: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg via Getty Images (Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Other companies will also have deals for the Monday after the Super Bowl.

    Applebee’s on Monday will give dine-in customers six free boneless wings “should a pass be intercepted and returned for a touchdown” during the game if they ask their server for the “Pick 6 Monday” deal or use the code “PICK6” on online orders. A minimum $10 purchase is required for the deal.  

    At Starbucks, rewards members in the U.S. can get a complimentary tall hot or iced brewed coffee Monday with a coupon they can find in the chain’s app. 

    THROWING A SUPER BOWL PARTY? WHAT THIS YEAR’S FOODS WILL COST

    The Super Bowl could also result in six free boneless or traditional wings at Buffalo Wild Wings between 2-5 p.m. on Feb. 24, but that will be contingent on the Eagles and Chiefs taking Sunday’s game into overtime. Customers eating at participating U.S. Buffalo Wild Wings locations during that three-hour window and those doing in-person takeout can get those free wings if that happens, the company said. 

    Exterior of a Buffalo Wild Wings chain restaurant. Also known as B-Dubs, this dine-in establishment sells chicken wings and pub food

    Exterior of a Buffalo Wild Wings chain restaurant. Also known as B-Dubs, this dine-in establishment sells chicken wings and pub food (iStock / iStock)

    The Chiefs will come into the game as the defending champions. They have won four Super Bowls, including the past two, and are looking to notch a historic third back-to-back title.

    Their Super Bowl opponents, the Eagles, have one championship title, won in 2018, under their belts. 

     

  • US economy added 143,000 jobs in January

    US economy added 143,000 jobs in January

    The U.S. economy added jobs at a slower pace than expected in January, as the Federal Reserve remains in a holding pattern for interest rate cuts as it evaluates the labor market and inflation data.

    The Labor Department on Friday reported that employers added 143,000 jobs in January, below the estimate from LSEG economists.

    The unemployment rate came in at 4%, coming in lower than economists’ expectations.

    The number of jobs added in the prior two months were both revised, with job creation in November revised up by 49,000 from a gain of 212,000 to 261,000; while December was revised up by 51,000 from a gain of 256,000 to 307,000. Taken together, 100,000 more jobs were created in those two months than previously reported.

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

  • Lumber, construction material prices could rise due to tariffs

    Lumber, construction material prices could rise due to tariffs

    President Donald Trump’s plan to impose a 25% tariff on goods from Canada and Mexico triggered warnings from several trade groups that such a move would drive up the cost of housing, given that a significant amount of key building materials are sourced from our neighboring nations.

    Although the president agreed to hit pause on those tariffs for a month after both countries offered concessions to help secure the U.S. boarder, the threat of a surge in prices is looming over several industries.

    Home builders and materials suppliers are warning that tariffs on goods from Canada, China and Mexico will drive up construction costs and worsen the housing affordability crisis. (Photographer: Jordan Vonderhaar/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Following Trump signing the executive order, the National Home Builders Association urged the president to reconsider, with NHBA Chairman Carl Harris noting that “More than 70% of the imports of two essential materials that home builders rely on — softwood lumber and gypsum (used for drywall) — come from Canada and Mexico, respectively.”

    Days later, the trade group warned lumber costs would spike by 40% – even higher than the 25%, – if the tariff on softwood lumber products from Canada is imposed, because the tariffs would be on top of an effective 14.5 duty rate already in place.

    HOME AFFORDABILITY CRISIS TAKING A TOLL ON AMERICA’S YOUNG ADULTS

    CFRA Analyst Ana Garcia wrote in a note this week that U.S. logging has declined in recent years, and if the tariffs on Canada go through, American logging might not be able to fill the gap.

    Home Depot Store

    A major of softwood lumber used in the U.S. is imported from Canada ((Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) / Getty Images)

    “Rising framing lumber costs, should tariffs roll out on March 4, 2025, will likely reduce housing starts, worsen affordability challenges for buyers, and increase margin headwinds for homebuilders,” Garcia wrote.

    HOW EXTREME WEATHER, HIGH HOME PRICES COULD AFFECT THE 2025 HOUSING MARKET

    National Lumber and Building Material Dealers Association President and CEO Jonathan Paine warned Wednesday that going through with the planned tariffs on Canada and Mexico would “would be potentially devastating to the American economy and the housing market.”

    “The United States already has an affordable housing crisis and we as a nation must be focused on advocating for measures that reduce construction costs and eliminate regulatory barriers, not policy that discourages or creates new challenges for developing affordable housing,” he said in a statement.

    Meanwhile, the construction industry is also concerned about the additional 10% tariff Trump place on imports from China this week.

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    Jim Tobin, CEO of NAHB says that despite the 11th hour reprieve on the tariffs with the 30-day delay, there is still a lot of uncertainty, and warns China, Mexico, and Canada are three of the largest construction suppliers to the U.S.

    “There is not a room in your home that doesn’t have something from one of those three countries, including doorknobs, light fixtures, framing lumber, and sheathing,” Tobin told FOX Business.

  • Bud Light hasn’t recovered from Mulvaney controversy, ex-Anheuser-Busch exec says

    Bud Light hasn’t recovered from Mulvaney controversy, ex-Anheuser-Busch exec says

    Bud Light has not yet recuperated from the Dylan Mulvaney controversy, according to a former Anheuser-Busch executive.

    “They haven’t at all [recovered],” former Anheuser-Busch President of Operations Anson Frericks said Tuesday during an interview on FOX Business’ “Varney & Co.” Tuesday. 

    Despite companies backing away from pushing politics through DEI and ESG policies, the damage to Bud Light is still taking its toll as “they continue to shed customers,” Frericks said.  

    BUD LIGHT SALES STILL SUFFERING IN US A YEAR AFTER CONTROVERSY

    The beer brand stumbled into controversy in 2023 following a partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. The tag team with the influencer sparked outrage from consumers, resulting in a drop in sales, customers and shareholder value. The company also saw itself being surpassed in sales by Michelob Ultra and Modelo Especial. 

    Bud Light sales were down 29.9% year-over-year for the week ending Jan. 20, compared with the same period last year, according to the latest numbers provided to FOX Business by Bump Williams Consulting, which analyzed NielsenIQ data. 

    “I think that’s one of the most interesting parts about this story is that they lost 30% of their customers,” he pointed out. “Millions of customers, billions of dollars of shareholder value over the last couple of years.”

    Bud Light’s 2023 partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney saw consumer outrage and an exodus of customers. Former Anheuser-Busch executive Anson Frericks believes the beer brand has yet to recover from the controversy.  (Instagram/Fox News / Fox News)

    The former executive noted how the partnership impacted stocks and how the brand’s efforts to recover with Super Bowl ads would not relieve the pain.  

    “They are advertising Bud Light. And candidly, the commercials are actually pretty good,” he said. “They have Shane Gillis who’s about the opposite of Dylan Mulvaney. You couldn’t have maybe someone more opposite. They have Post Malone, but the problem is they’ve lost a lot of their customers.” 

    BUD LIGHT STILL REELING FROM ‘UNFORCED ERROR’ AS MODELO ESPECIAL AND MICHELOB ULTRA BOTH SURPASSED IT

    He also pointed out the dilemma Bud Light faces regarding its vision. 

    “Their customers are asking them, ‘hey, what is Bud Light going to be moving forward? Is it gonna be more than Shane Gillis and fun in football, or is it Dylan Mulvaney?’”

    “Until the company really comes back and says clearly what Bud Light is going to be? I don’t know if any of their loyal customers are going to come back,” he added. 

    READ MORE FROM FOX BUSINESS

    Fox News Digital’s Breck Dumas also contributed to this report.

  • Trump’s tariffs on Mexico and Canada will increase prices for consumers

    Trump’s tariffs on Mexico and Canada will increase prices for consumers

    President Donald Trump’s announcement of tariffs on Mexico and Canada, though delayed for at least one month, could spur a rise in prices paid by consumers for products affected by the tariffs if they’re eventually implemented.

    Trump announced last weekend that 25% tariffs, which are taxes on imported products, would take effect on products from Canada and Mexico effective Feb. 4 – as well as a lower 10% tariff on Canadian energy products. Canada and Mexico threatened retaliatory tariffs in response to Trump’s tariff plans.

    The president reached an agreement with Canada and Mexico to delay the tariffs for at least one month after the two countries announced measures to counter fentanyl smuggling and illegal immigration across the U.S. border.

    While the tariffs on Canada and Mexico are on hold for the time being, their potential implementation in the future leaves open the possibility that American consumers could face higher prices for certain products if they ultimately take effect.

    WHAT’S HAPPENING WITH TRUMP’S TARIFFS ON CHINA, CANADA AND MEXICO?

    President Trump has touted tariffs as a negotiating tool and source of tax revenue. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “Assuming in the next month or so the tariffs on Mexico and Canada do go into effect, you’ll see prices go higher on a lot of goods,” Dan Savickas, VP of policy and government affairs at the Taxpayers Protection Alliance, told FOX Business.

    Scott Lincicome, VP of general economics and trade policy at the Cato Institute, said in an interview with FOX Business that the “three big areas for potential consumer pain would be food, energy and autos.”

    “On food, we import a ton of fresh seasonal produce as well as beer… meat and a few other things from Mexico,” he explained. “These are perishable items that you can’t stockpile and in the case of avocados, there aren’t really suitable replacements whether in the U.S. or abroad. Given that grocers in the U.S. have very low profit margins, you would inevitably see any sort of tariff on, say, Mexican avocados just passed right on to the consumer – there’s nowhere else for it to go.”

    VOTERS REJECT TRUMP’S TARIFF PUSH; MOST BELIEVE POLICY WILL HURT ECONOMY

    avacado

    Avocadoes are among the products from Mexico that could see price hikes if tariffs take effect. (Camilo Freedman/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Lincicome explained that the auto industry is more complex, with suppliers and produce in the U.S., Canada and Mexico comprising the North American auto supply chain. 

    “You apply tariffs on these things and you’re effectively ensuring some sort of substantial cost increase for automotive manufacturers in all three countries and then the question is how much of that gets passed on,” Lincicome explained. “Depending on whom you talk to, it’s anywhere between $1,000 and $6,000 on a new car and again, there’s some amount of that that manufacturers can absorb – of course, with less investment and hiring and output in the process.”

    “We import so much crude oil from Canada and it’s a type of crude oil that we don’t really make in the U.S., it’s a heavy crude. Certain refineries, particularly in the Midwest and the Mountain West, are designed to process that type of crude and they can’t really process the light crude that the U.S. makes cheaply or easily,” he explained.

    TRUMP’S ‘EXTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE’ WILL COLLECT FROM IMPORTERS, NOT ‘FOREIGN SOURCES’

    Belvidere auto assembly

    Tariffs on the interconnected North American auto supply chain could result in higher new car prices. (Michael Tercha/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Lincicome added that there would likely be some price increases on appliances like washing machines, dishwashers and air conditioners that are made in the three countries.

    Other products that Savickas noted could see price increases due to the tariffs include lumber and associated products given the volume of Canadian lumber imported by the U.S., as well as tomato products from Mexico.

    Brandon Parsons, an economist at Pepperdine University’s Graziadio Business School, told FOX Business that his research suggested the consumer price index (CPI), a popular inflation gauge, could rise by 1.3 percentage points if tariffs are implemented. 

    Given that CPI was 2.9% in December, it could push inflation above 4% – a level which is double the Federal Reserve’s target. Parsons said that for the average household, that 1.3% increase in the CPI would likely increase expenses by about $1,000 and those expenses could rise relatively quickly in some cases.

    “Assuming that these tariffs go through in a month, I would expect prices on groceries to go up relatively soon,” Parsons explained. “Certain products like an avocado, it could be a couple of weeks possibly, maybe even sooner in other cases.”

    TRUMP TARIFFS PROMPT WARNINGS FROM TRADE GROUPS

    gas pump

    Gas prices could rise if tariffs are imposed on Canadian crude oil imports. (Sven Hoppe/picture alliance via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    With respect to energy prices, Parsons said his research showed that gas prices could rise by 70 cents as a result of the tariffs on Canadian crude oil, even with the carve out of a lower tariff rate of 10%. He added that retaliation between the U.S. and Canada could push that increase even higher.

    Alex Durante, senior economist at the Tax Foundation, told FOX Business that, “Since these tariffs are targeting a wider variety of goods, like agriculture for instance, firms will have fewer margins of adjustment, so consumers will ultimately be bearing the burden in terms of higher prices.”

    Durante added that the U.S. could be seen as a less credible trading partner in the future given the tariff threats against Canada and Mexico – two of America’s largest trading partners who are party to the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) that Trump negotiated during his first term.

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    “The U.S. also stands to lose further credibility, because when we signed the USMCA, part of that is a commitment to not impose tariffs in violation of that agreement,” he explained. “So on the whole, not only will our economy be worse off because of the tariffs, but I think the U.S. will have more difficulty negotiating free trade agreements in the future.”

  • Costco awarded execs hundreds of thousands in DEI related bonuses

    Costco awarded execs hundreds of thousands in DEI related bonuses

    Costco doled out hundreds of thousands in bonuses to their CEO and top execs based on diversity, equity and inclusion and environmental metrics between the years of 2021-2024, a Fox News Digital analysis has found.

    The grocery wholesaler giant paid CEO Ron Vachris a $93,333 bonus in 2024 based on achieving social and environmental objectives, which included “metrics concerning diversity, equity and inclusion, resource consumption, and other environmental-related areas,” according to their 2024 proxy statement. Other executives were offered $24,000 in bonuses related to achieving diversity, equity and inclusion metrics.

    In 2023, then-CEO Craig Jelinek was awarded a $100,000 bonus for meeting environmental and DEI metrics, according to that year’s proxy statement. Other execs were awarded up to a $24,000 bonus for hitting DEI benchmarks. DEI-linked bonuses have been awarded every year since 2020, Costco proxy statements revealed.

    WASHINGTON AG STANDS BY COSTCO, BLASTS REPUBLICAN ATTORNEYS GENERAL THREATENING DEI CRACKDOWN

    Costco has doled out bonuses on the basis of hitting DEI metrics, their proxy statements reveal. 

    The wholesale giant has been tight-lipped about their DEI policies, and Fox News Digital was unable to determine which specific metrics the bonuses were tied to. The company didn’t respond to a request for comment. However, Costco’s website sheds some light on the company’s DEI initiatives.

    “The role of the company’s Chief Diversity Officer (CDO) is to support the advancement of inclusion at Costco, the growth of a diverse employee base, our relationships in the communities where we do business and an increase in our base of diverse suppliers,” according to the website.

    FORMER COSTCO EXECUTIVE DEFENDS ITS DEI POLICIES, SAYS CRITICS DON’T UNDERSTAND THE COMPANY’S CULTURE

    Al Sharpton

    Al Sharpton staged a “buy in” to support Costco upholding DEI metrics.  ((Photo by Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images) / Getty Images)

    Costco has managers and employees take a course in “inclusive conversations,” which the website lists as “10 modules of conversations to encourage leaders and employees to engage in inclusive conversations.” The program was launched in 2020, and as of 2024 new content was added to facilitate connections “across differences, manage assumptions and make people feel heard,” per the website. 

    The grocery chain also lists the demographics of its “Supervisor in Training” program, which is designed to help with the professional development of employees. According to their website, 57.3% of the 7,000 employees who participated in the training program identified as “People of Color.” 

    Waves of backlash and support have crashed on the wholesaler ever since the board overwhelmingly voted to reject a proposal challenging their DEI initiatives in January. Rev. Al Sharpton staged a “buy in” at the Costco location in Harlem to reward the company for sticking with DEI, but 19 states’ attorneys general have ordered the grocer to drop the controversial policies in order to conform with a Trump administration executive order.

    costco customers refilling soda at costco

    A former Costco exec said DEI has always been the company’s culture.  (Callaghan O’Hare/Bloomberg / Getty Images)

    READ MORE FROM FOX BUSINESS

    Former Costco executive Roger Campbell pushed back on critics of the company, saying that DEI has always been part of their culture. 

    “The term DEI didn’t even exist to us, it was the way we ran our business… it’s who we are,” Campbell said. 

  • Trump’s tariffs on Mexico and Canada will increase prices for consumers

    What are tariffs and how do they work?

    President Donald Trump’s moves to impose or threaten higher tariffs on countries like China, Canada and Mexico – America’s three largest trading partners – have prompted questions about what tariffs are and how they impact consumers.

    Trump signed executive orders last weekend to impose 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico, with a lower 10% tariff rate applied to Canadian energy products. Those tariffs were delayed for at least one month after Canada and Mexico announced measures to counter drug smuggling and illegal immigration along their borders with the U.S.

    He also increased tariffs on goods imported from China by 10% across-the-board. Those tariffs took effect on Feb. 4, and the Chinese government announced retaliatory tariffs on certain U.S. energy exports and took other punitive measures, including an antitrust probe of Google and restrictions on exports of rare earth minerals.

    Tariffs are taxes levied on imported goods and services. While they historically played a more significant role in contributing to federal tax revenue, developed countries have moved away from relying on tariffs as a main source of funding and have shifted to other forms of taxes – such as income, payroll or sales taxes.

    WHAT’S HAPPENING WITH TRUMP’S TARIFFS ON CHINA, CANADA AND MEXICO?

    President Donald Trump raised tariffs on Canada and Mexico, as well as Canada, which he cited as a response to fentanyl flows from those countries into the U.S. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    After the end of World War II, the global trading system moved to a rules-based format for tariffs that was initially established under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Taxes (GATT) in 1947, which later became part of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995, the Congressional Research Service said.

    The system established by GATT and the WTO created rules governing how countries can use tariffs on trading partners, as well as to settle disputes and prevent trade wars – which occur when countries enter a cycle of imposing retaliatory tariffs on each other. 

    It has contributed to a decline in global tariff rates as well as expanding markets for U.S. exporters. As the CRS noted, U.S. exports have increased by more than 160% adjusted for inflation since the WTO’s establishment.

    VOTERS REJECT TRUMP’S TARIFF PUSH; MOST BELIEVE POLICY WILL HURT ECONOMY

    american alcohol in canadian liquor store

    A sign that reads ”Buy Canadian Instead” is displayed on top of bottles, hanging near another sign that reads “American Whiskey” following Trump’s announcement of tariffs on Canadian goods. (REUTERS/Chris Helgren / Reuters)

    Who pays for tariffs?

    Companies that import products that are covered by a tariff pay for the tariff when those goods enter the importer’s country. 

    In the U.S., tariffs are collected by the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency, which is a subagency of the Department of Homeland Security. Trump has proposed creating an “External Revenue Service” that would be responsible for collecting tariffs, though it’s unclear whether that plan will move forward.

    Tariffs increase the price of a product to the importing company, which then has to decide whether to increase the prices paid by consumers to maintain their profit margins, or to keep prices relatively constant and absorb the tariff’s cost in its bottom line. 

    In some cases, the exporting company may look to maintain its market share by lowering its prices to help importers deal with the tariff’s cost – though their willingness to do that depends on demand for the product that’s subject to the tariff.

    Justin Trudeau

    Canada announced border security measures that prompted Trump to delay his tariffs on Canadian goods for at least one month. (Kamara Morozuk/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    TRUMP’S TARIFFS PROMPT WARNINGS FROM TRADE GROUPS

    “It really depends on the price sensitivity of the product,” Brandon Parsons, an economist at Pepperdine University’s Graziadio Business School, told FOX Business in an interview.

    “For a producer that has a lot of leverage – consumers really want to purchase their product and there is inelastic demand, like for example, the iPhone – they’re able to just increase the price and consumers are going to still pay for it, and the iPhone holds its market share,” Parsons said.

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    “Other products where consumers are more price sensitive and there’s a lot of substitutes, there’s a lot of competition, then it could be in that case that producers are just going to reduce their margins. So they’ll keep prices the same so they’re not losing market share, losing demand, but just eating a little bit as it relates to their margins, so their overall profitability goes down,” he added.

  • LARRY KUDLOW: Congressional Republicans must not stop the Trump Tax Cuts

    LARRY KUDLOW: Congressional Republicans must not stop the Trump Tax Cuts

    All of a sudden, nothing but bad news is coming out of the Republican Congress regarding tax cuts. Some people in the House are talking about a 5-year extension of the Trump Tax Cuts. The Senators are talking about 2, or even 3 budget bills that would put the tax cuts toward the back of the queue. This is bad economics and bad politics. 

    Are Republicans suffering from amnesia about the economy. Which was the number one issue in last November’s election. And there were 2 components to the economy: inflation and affordability. In other words, with Bidenflation going up 20%, real wages for middle- and lower-income blue-collar workers went down. Mr. Trump’s successful coalition of working-class voters was not based on race, gender, or left-wing culture. It was based on the paucity of income.

    There are 2 ways to fatten middle-income wallets.  Getting inflation down, which would lower energy costs, and less government spending and money printing, and cut their taxes. Supply-side policies are always political and economic winners. Working class voters could not afford to live in the Biden economy. But Republican economic policies must give plenty of elbow room to working folks so they can fatten their wallets and easily afford the Trump economy. And if the Republican hang-up is a bunch of failed economic models from government bean counters, like the CBO, the GOP should stand up and fight it. 

    Revenues after the Trump tax cuts in 2017 increased by $1.5 to $2 trillion. Even the CBO admits it was close to $2 trillion above their early estimates. And although it seems arcane and, in the woods, the GOP should be using Senator Mike Crapo’s policy baseline — which argues that making the popular tax cuts permanent have not, yet nor will in the future, cause a loss of revenues. So they don’t have to cut $4 to $5 trillion in spending right away. Yes, they should get spending down to Scott Bessent’s 3% of GDP deficits. And lower the debt to GDP ratio. But the Laffer Curve growth dividend from tax cuts will be huge. 

    That’s what history shows. And there’s another reason why the GOP should make all the Trump tax cuts permanent: the President wants it. 

    He was elected on the tax cut promise among others. As White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said today, the tax priorities of Mr. Trump are very clear: make the 2017 Tax Cuts Permanent, no tax on tips, no tax on seniors, no tax on overtime pay, tax cuts for Made in America products, and eliminate special tax breaks for billionaires — including sports team owners. Or the carried interest loophole on investment. These are Presidential priorities. He won the election by a near landslide. 

    His working-class coalition of blacks, browns, Asians, young people, women, males, that coalition was based largely on an optimistic belief that Trump can rejuvenate the economy and unlimited access to climb the ladder of opportunity is what elected Mr. Trump. Republicans in the House and Senate must not stand in President Trump’s way.