NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
AlsTrumpFebruaryMajorDane'sResearchElectionCandidateCampaignPartyStrikesNewsDigestSundayTimelineLaunchesPrivateGlobalCongressionalCrisisPoliticalEricBlueCredit
AlsTrumpFebruaryMajorDane'sResearchElectionCandidateCampaignPartyStrikesNewsDigestSundayTimelineLaunchesPrivateGlobalCongressionalCrisisPoliticalEricBlueCredit
All Articles
Indonesia seals ‘great’ US trade deal, agrees to send 8,000 troops to Gaza
South China Morning Post
Clustered Story
Published 2 days ago

Indonesia seals ‘great’ US trade deal, agrees to send 8,000 troops to Gaza

South China Morning Post · Feb 20, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

The White House announced a reciprocal trade agreement with Indonesia on Thursday while President Prabowo Subianto was in Washington to attend the first meeting of President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace”. Under the agreement, Southeast Asia’s largest economy will eliminate tariffs for 99 per cent of American goods while the US would maintain tariffs on most Indonesian goods at 19 per cent, the White House said. That is the same rate the US has set for Cambodia and Malaysia. Indonesia also...

Full Article

The White House announced a reciprocal trade agreement with Indonesia on Thursday while President Prabowo Subianto was in Washington to attend the first meeting of President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace”.Under the agreement, Southeast Asia’s largest economy will eliminate tariffs for 99 per cent of American goods while the US would maintain tariffs on most Indonesian goods at 19 per cent, the White House said. That is the same rate the US has set for Cambodia and Malaysia.Indonesia also agreed to address non-tariff barriers to US goods and to remove restrictions on exports to the US for critical minerals and other industrial commodities, the White House said.Indonesian and US companies also reached 11 deals this week worth US$38.4 billion, including purchases of US soybeans, corn, cotton and wheat, cooperation in critical minerals and oilfield recovery, and joint ventures in computer chips.“We have negotiated very intensively over the last few months, and I think we have reached solid understandings on many issues,” Prabowo told business executives on Wednesday at the US Chamber of Commerce.A White House statement called it a “great deal” and said it “will help both countries to strengthen economic security, promote economic growth and thereby continuously lead to global prosperity”.


Share this story

Read Original at South China Morning Post

Related Articles

Bloomberg2 days ago
US, Indonesia Secure Trade Deal, Slashing Tariff Rate to 19%

The US and Indonesia finalized a trade agreement Thursday, ending months of uncertainty with an accord that’s expected to lower US tariffs and see Jakarta facilitate the purchase of an estimated $33 billion in American goods. Brendan Murray reports on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

South China Morning Post18 minutes ago
How Trump’s Beijing bargaining could derail Taiwan’s multibillion-dollar defence budget

Taiwan’s parliament is set to prioritise review of a disputed NT$1.25 trillion (US$40 billion) special defence budget bill when its new session begins on Tuesday, as pressure mounts from Washington. But US President Donald Trump’s recent remarks about consulting Chinese President Xi Jinping on arms sales could complicate the debate, potentially giving Taipei’s opposition parties greater room to manoeuvre and reshape the final version of the bill, according to analysts. The renewed push follows...

South China Morning Post19 minutes ago
Software connection: US firm opens doors for global adoption of China’s humanoid robots

US software company OpenMind, according to founder and CEO Jan Liphardt, caused a commotion last year at a park in San Francisco where the firm shot a promotional video. “A crowd of people came, children came running, cars stopped and the police came,” he said, because “there was a robot in the park”. In an interview, Liphardt told the South China Morning Post that such a scenario would have been treated differently on the other side of the world. “If a [Unitree] G1 walked across the street in...

South China Morning Postabout 1 hour ago
Tributes paid to 6 firefighters killed in central China after truck veers off cliff

Relatives, colleagues and residents gathered in a county in central China on the weekend to pay tribute to six firefighters who died after putting out a blaze during the Chinese New Year holidays. The firefighters were killed on Thursday afternoon when their truck ran off a cliff in Xinhua county, Hunan province, as they were returning from extinguishing a house fire in the hills. A seventh firefighter in the truck was injured and transferred to a hospital in the capital city of Changsha that...

South China Morning Postabout 2 hours ago
Why the Fed credibility crisis will hit emerging markets harder

As political pressure on the US Federal Reserve intensifies in Washington, the reverberations are rippling across the globe. Gregory Peters, co-chief investment officer of fixed income at PGIM, has noted that bringing political pressure to bear on the Fed is an “own goal” – a self-inflicted shock that erodes confidence and is unlikely to deliver lower borrowing costs for the US. This reassessment – marked by quiet “sell America” trades – is beginning to surface. The damage extends far beyond...

South China Morning Postabout 2 hours ago
Hong Kong official warns of lower payout if Tai Po fire victims reject buy-back plan

The acquisition price for properties damaged in Hong Kong’s deadly Tai Po fire will be “far lower” if homeowners reject the government’s buy-back offer and authorities are forced to use legislation to acquire the remaining properties, a senior official has said. Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong Wai-lun on Sunday dismissed claims that the government was using public funds to cover its responsibility for the Tai Po tragedy, following online criticism that taxpayers’ money was being used to...