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Although business owners welcomed a temporary deal with China to slash tariffs, there's still considerable uncertainty about what happens next.
President Trump's latest executive order on drug prices aims to lower them by bringing them into line with what other developed countries pay. Experts caution that this is no small task.
Where does NPR get its funding? Today on the show, we open our books and share a brief history of public radio. And we learn ...
The number of Californians visiting a medical professional for mental health issues rose by about 434,000, or 10%, from 2019 ...
Water temperatures in the region remain cold until mid-summer, putting swimmers at risk for hypothermia. And when ...
A new audit looks at conditions at the Front Street Animal Shelter. How federal AmeriCorps cuts are affecting early childhood ...
Enlarging the dam would deliver more Sacramento River water to Central Valley farmers but a tribe could lose sacred sites and ...
Only 14 school districts and county offices of education have begun billing for behavioral health services under the Children ...
The U.S. and China ease the trade war with a significant cut to recently imposed tariffs. And, President Trump's trip to the Middle East is expected to involve a lot of commerce and cultural exchanges ...
At the center of that overhaul is an effort to sunset most of the current student loan repayment plans and offer future borrowers a simple binary: pay the same amount every month or tie your payments ...
American levies on Chinese goods will drop from at least 145% to 30% for an initial period 90 days, while Chinese levies are ...
Independent pharmacists warn that proposed tariffs, aimed at bringing drug production to the U.S., could raise prices, cause drug shortages and drive them out of business.