Gadgets sold without batteries. Toys sold in slimmed-down boxes or no packaging at all. More household goods that shoppers need to assemble themselves.Video above: Canadian business finds loophole to keep tariff costs down when sending products to U.S.These are some of the ways consumer product companies are retooling their wares to reduce costs and avoid raising prices as President Donald Trump levies new import taxes on key trading partners as well as some materials used by American manufacturers.The economic environment in which the president has imposed, threatened and occasionally postponed repeated rounds of tariffs is more precarious than during his first term. U.S. consumers are feeling tapped out after several years of inflation. Businesses say tariffs add to their expenses and eat into their profits, but they are wary of losing sales if they try to pass all of the increase on to customers.Instead, some companies are exploring cost-cutting options, …

Removing the roadblocks: How provinces can lead the charge on boosting internal trade
It’s time Canadian politicians take a stand against extremism displayed in our streets: Karen Restoule in National Newswatch
No batteries? Thinner packaging? US businesses look for ways to offset tariffs [Video]
Categories

How are First Nations' fish farms transforming the West Coast?: Ken Coates and Dallas Smith
Canada’s courts must protect women’s sex-based rights, like the U.K.: Mia Hughes in the National Post