🎥 PSG celebrate in Paris: fireworks, Macron backs Al Khelaifi 🔥
The Champions League final against Inter was dominated by PSG, who won the 'Big Ears Cup' for the first time in their history.
Everything had been ready for days: the Parisian team, who landed in Paris on a special plane and were led by president Nasser Al Khelaifi, paraded through the streets of the capital on two open-top buses, celebrating the triumph together with over 110,000 jubilant fans on the Champs-Élysées.
Advertisement
A procession of motorcycles and scooters accompanied the parade, with chants, flags, and flares, all the way to the Élysée Palace for a meeting with President Emmanuel Macron.
😅 Macron 'pushes' Al Khelaifi
🎇 Fireworks at the Arc de Triomphe
🏆 Dembélé, the celebration with the fans
😍 The welcome for Dembélé
🎉 The party at Parc des Princes
Incredible joy in the streets of Paris for the first Champions League in the history of the French club.
This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇮🇹 here.
📸 FRANCK FIFE - AFP or licensors
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
17 minutes ago
- CNN
Trump's tariff fallout? It's worse than we previously thought, says OECD
President Donald Trump's trade war will wreak greater economic damage than previously expected, both in the United States and everywhere else, according to new forecasts by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. In a report Tuesday, the group of 38 mostly wealthy nations sharply downgraded its 2025 economic growth forecast for America to 1.6% from the 2.2% projected in March and said growth would be even weaker next year. The report underscores the uncertainty and chaos around Trump's tariffs, as well as their potential to cause lasting harm across the world. The Paris-based organization cited higher tariffs, including retaliatory tariffs imposed on American exports, a slowdown in net immigration and a 'sizable reduction' in the federal workforce. The OECD also expects the global economy to slow markedly to 2.9% growth both this year and next — a downgrade from its prior forecasts of 3.1% and 3% respectively. That's based on the assumption that tariffs worldwide will remain at their mid-May levels, it said. 'The global economy has shifted from a period of resilient growth and declining inflation to a more uncertain path,' OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said in a statement. 'Today's policy uncertainty is weakening trade and investment, diminishing consumer and business confidence and curbing growth prospects.' In its Economic Outlook report, the OECD said it expects the slowdown to be 'concentrated' in the US, Canada, Mexico and China — four of the countries most affected by Trump's new tariffs. Since retaking office in January, the US president has hiked import duties on most of America's trading partners and on key goods, including cars and steel. Despite his tariff plan hitting a legal stumbling block last week, a round of punishingly high 'reciprocal tariffs' are due to whack many of America's trading partners from July 9 unless they can strike a deal with Washington. The tariffs, their erratic implementation and the unpredictability that both have injected into the global economy are weighing on many businesses and consumers. According to the OECD, the new US import taxes, in combination with retaliatory trade barriers erected by China and Canada, are 'pointing to much greater disruption than during the US-China trade tensions in 2018-19' — a reference to the trade war during Trump's first term. The OECD said new levies risk pushing up inflation in the countries imposing them and that central banks — which hike interest rates to slow price rises — should 'remain vigilant.' In contrast, Trump has publicly pressured US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to cut the cost of borrowing in America, while Powell has preferred to wait to see how the president's tariffs will impact the world's largest economy before deciding whether to cut or raise rates.


CNN
19 minutes ago
- CNN
Trump's tariff fallout? It's worse than we previously thought, says OECD
President Donald Trump's trade war will wreak greater economic damage than previously expected, both in the United States and everywhere else, according to new forecasts by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. In a report Tuesday, the group of 38 mostly wealthy nations sharply downgraded its 2025 economic growth forecast for America to 1.6% from the 2.2% projected in March and said growth would be even weaker next year. The report underscores the uncertainty and chaos around Trump's tariffs, as well as their potential to cause lasting harm across the world. The Paris-based organization cited higher tariffs, including retaliatory tariffs imposed on American exports, a slowdown in net immigration and a 'sizable reduction' in the federal workforce. The OECD also expects the global economy to slow markedly to 2.9% growth both this year and next — a downgrade from its prior forecasts of 3.1% and 3% respectively. That's based on the assumption that tariffs worldwide will remain at their mid-May levels, it said. 'The global economy has shifted from a period of resilient growth and declining inflation to a more uncertain path,' OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said in a statement. 'Today's policy uncertainty is weakening trade and investment, diminishing consumer and business confidence and curbing growth prospects.' In its Economic Outlook report, the OECD said it expects the slowdown to be 'concentrated' in the US, Canada, Mexico and China — four of the countries most affected by Trump's new tariffs. Since retaking office in January, the US president has hiked import duties on most of America's trading partners and on key goods, including cars and steel. Despite his tariff plan hitting a legal stumbling block last week, a round of punishingly high 'reciprocal tariffs' are due to whack many of America's trading partners from July 9 unless they can strike a deal with Washington. The tariffs, their erratic implementation and the unpredictability that both have injected into the global economy are weighing on many businesses and consumers. According to the OECD, the new US import taxes, in combination with retaliatory trade barriers erected by China and Canada, are 'pointing to much greater disruption than during the US-China trade tensions in 2018-19' — a reference to the trade war during Trump's first term. The OECD said new levies risk pushing up inflation in the countries imposing them and that central banks — which hike interest rates to slow price rises — should 'remain vigilant.' In contrast, Trump has publicly pressured US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to cut the cost of borrowing in America, while Powell has preferred to wait to see how the president's tariffs will impact the world's largest economy before deciding whether to cut or raise rates.

Business Insider
29 minutes ago
- Business Insider
It's official: Trump's tariffs are damaging the economy
In its latest Economic Outlook, released on Tuesday, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development cut its forecast for US economic growth in 2025, pointing to the fallout from the administration's trade policies. The 2.8% rate it predicted in March has now been reduced to 1.6%. The OECD warned that these tariffs, which have pushed the effective US import rate to 15.4% — the highest since 1938 — were not only affecting US growth but reverberating across the global economy too. Global growth was now projected to slow to 2.9% in both 2025 and 2026, down from 3.3% in 2024. The OECD said the slowdown in growth was concentrated in the US, Canada, Mexico, and China. Growth in China, the world's second-largest economy, was expected to fall to 4.7% in 2025, down from 5% last year, and come in at 4.3% in 2026. As of May 27, a blanket 10% tariff applies to all goods imported into the US, with some limited exemptions. Stoking inflation A 50% tariff on imports from the European Union were paused until July 7 amid " fast-tracked" negotiations, while steep levies on imports from China have also been put on hold. The OECD said these policies were eroding investment, disrupting supply chains, and stoking inflation — especially in the US, where price growth is now projected to approach 4% by the end of the year. OECD secretary-general Mathias Cormann said governments needed to work to keep markets open and preserve the "economic benefits of rules-based global trade for competition, innovation, productivity, efficiency and ultimately growth." Chief economist lvaro Pereira added: "Lower growth and less trade will hit incomes and slow job growth." The organization urged governments to de-escalate tensions and roll back tariffs to avoid further damage to the global economy. In a Monday note, Deutsche Bank economists said there were global signs of a "turbulent but sustained path toward trade de-escalation. The fallout from the US 'Liberation Day' policies — from falling approval ratings to a sell-off in US government bonds — forced a rethink in Washington. While recent court rulings could pave the way for an even more benign trade regime, they also prolong uncertainty."