The Commerce Department has vowed to impose a punishing 92% antidumping tax on 13 major Italian pasta exporters in January, on top of a 15% tariff on European Union goods. Italian pasta brands have warned the duties could force them to pull their products from American grocery store shelves. The punitive tax comes after the Department of Commerce requested information from two best-selling brands, Pasta Garofalo and La Molisana, as part of an investigation into “antidumping” allegations.
For the record, 90% of people couldn't tell the difference between these so-called 'premium pastas' and your grocer's store brand pasta - properly cooked - once it gets hit with sauce. Juss' sayin'
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I thought Skinners was the best spaghetti.. It Is, isn't it?
ReplyDeleteCheap pasta is not the same, even with something like ramen noodles you can tell the difference.
ReplyDeleteI do not know if true but have read that Euro pastas do not have a lot of the garbage ingridients/chems that US pastas do,anyone know if this is true?
ReplyDeleteThat's true for US food in general.
Deletehttps://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/treasurys-bessent-says-substantial-relief-coffee-bananas-prices-coming-soon
ReplyDeleteExplain to us again how tariffs don't affect prices? Here's the Trump administration straight up telling us they are going to lower tariffs in order to lower prices for consumers.