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Do you know who exports these foods to the U.S.? Test your knowledge.

Do you know who exports these foods to the U.S.? Test your knowledge.

Washington Post03-06-2025

More than four months into Donald Trump's second term as president, many Americans have been struck by a malaise, unknown to earlier generations, known as tariff fatigue. Its symptoms include a dizzying inability to keep up with the constantly changing costs of goods and how they might affect consumer pocketbooks.
Since his inauguration on Jan. 20, Trump has announced new or revised tariff policies more than 50 times, based on an accounting maintained by The Washington Post. Some tariffs were rolled back within a day. Some, such as the 145 percent tariff on Chinese imports, have been reduced because of political and economic pressures.
For a hot minute, most of the tariffs were halted after the little-known Court of International Trade ruled that they were illegal, a decision that was temporarily paused Thursday by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs: Now you see them, now you don't. Now you see them again — but for how long?
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The head-spinning, ever-changing landscape has left many Americans wondering how the tariffs will affect their ability to purchase not just dolls and pencils, but also the kinds of products that wake us up in the morning, season our foods or satisfy our sweet tooth after a long day on the job. The Post reviewed import data for eight common ingredients — those found in cookies, candy bars, salad dressings, cereals and hot beverages — to see which countries send us the most of each item. We then compared the top country in each category against the current trade tariffs, whether the universal 10 percent tariff that applies to all countries or the steeper ones applied to China, to see how imports could be affected.
How much do you know about the sources of American imports? Test your knowledge with the following quiz. Some of the answers may surprise you as much as they did us.

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