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Treasury Secretary Bessent Addresses Tax Cuts, Iran Sanctions, and Critical Minerals in Busy Week of International Economic Diplomacy

Treasury Secretary Bessent Addresses Tax Cuts, Iran Sanctions, and Critical Minerals in Busy Week of International Economic Diplomacy

Published 5 days, 10 hours ago
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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been active this week addressing key economic and international issues. On Wednesday, during a White House press briefing, Bessent highlighted Trump accounts, a new program offering savings for children under 18, calling them transformational, according to Forbes Breaking News. The U.S. Treasury website reports that he signed a Tax Information Exchange Agreement with Saudi Arabian Minister of Finance Mohammed bin Abdullah al-Jadaan, while acknowledging Saudi resilience amid the Iranian conflict.

Bessent also met with French Minister of Finance Roland Lescure to discuss critical minerals cooperation ahead of Frances 2026 G7 leadership, and pressed France to urge the European Union to counter Irans threats, per another Treasury readout. Similar talks with Mexican Secretary of Finance Edgar Amador Zamora advanced the U.S. Mexico Action Plan on critical minerals and USMCA review, with emphasis on fighting drug trafficking. He met UAE Minister of State for Financial Affairs Mohamed bin Hadi Al Hussaini, expressing solidarity after Irans missile strikes and pushing maximum pressure on Iran to stabilize energy markets.

On Tax Day, Bessent joined White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and Small Business Administration Administrator Kelly Loeffler to promote Working Families Tax Cuts. The National News Desk notes he said 45 percent of taxpayers benefited from cuts boosting wages for tipped workers, overtime earners, Social Security recipients, and American vehicle buyers, predicting record refunds despite polls showing mixed sentiment. He agreed 70 percent of Americans feel overtaxed, focusing on strong consumer behavior over surveys.

Addressing gas prices up due to the Iran war, with national averages 1.12 dollars higher and Brent crude at 95 dollars per barrel, Bessent expressed frustration at slow station price drops and suggested prices could reach 3 dollars, as reported by NBC Montana. He warned Chinese banks aiding Iran risk U.S. Treasury identification for sanctions, per Forbes Breaking News, and noted 40 billion dollars in tariff refunds pending after a Supreme Court ruling.

The Treasury International Monetary and Financial Committee statement from Bessent stressed temporary IMF lending focused on stabilization.

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