logo
Trade war cuts global economic growth outlook: OECD

Trade war cuts global economic growth outlook: OECD

Japan Times2 days ago

The OECD slashed its annual global growth forecast on Tuesday, warning that U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs blitz would stifle the world economy — hitting the United States especially hard.
After 3.3% growth last year, the world economy is now expected to expand by a "modest" 2.9% in 2025 and 2026, the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said.
In its previous report in March, the OECD had forecast growth of 3.1% for 2025 and 3.0% for 2026.
Since then, Trump has launched a wave of tariffs that has rattled financial markets.
"The global outlook is becoming increasingly challenging," said the OECD, an economic policy group of 38 mostly wealthy countries.
It said "substantial increases" in trade barriers, tighter financial conditions, weaker business and consumer confidence, and heightened policy uncertainty will all have "marked adverse effects on growth" if they persist.
The OECD downgraded its 2025 growth forecast for the United States from 2.2% to 1.6%.
The world's biggest economy is expected to slow further next year to 1.5%.
Trump, who has insisted that the tariffs would spark a manufacturing revival and restore a U.S. economic "Golden Age," posted on his Truth Social platform before the OECD report's publication: "Because of Tariffs, our Economy is BOOMING!"
The OECD holds a ministerial meeting in Paris on Tuesday and Wednesday.
U.S. and EU trade negotiators are expected to hold talks on the sidelines of the gathering after Trump threatened to hit the European Union with 50percent tariffs.
The Group of Seven advanced economies is also holding a meeting focused on trade.
"For everyone, including the United States, the best option is that countries sit down and get an agreement," OECD chief economist Alvaro Pereira said in an interview.
"Avoiding further trade fragmentation is absolutely key in the next few months and years," Pereira said.
Trump imposed in April a baseline tariff of 10% on imports from around the world.
He unveiled higher tariffs on dozens of countries but has paused them until July to allow time for negotiations.
The U.S. president has also imposed 25percent tariffs on cars and now plans to raise those on steel and aluminum to 50% on Wednesday.
In the OECD report, Pereira warned that "weakened economic prospects will be felt around the world, with almost no exception."
He added that "lower growth and less trade will hit incomes and slow job growth."
The outlook "has deteriorated" in the United States after the economy expanded by a robust 2.8% last year, the report said.
The effective tariff rate on U.S. merchandise imports has gone from 2% in 2024 to 15.4%, the highest since 1938, the OECD said.
The higher rate and policy uncertainty "will dent household consumption and business investment growth," the report said.
The OECD also blamed "high economic policy uncertainty, a significant slowdown in net immigration and a sizeable reduction in the federal workforce."
While annual inflation is expected to "moderate" among the Group of 20 economies to 3.6% in 2025 and 3.2% in 2026, the United States is "an important exception."
U.S. inflation is expected to accelerate to just under 4% by the end of the year, two times higher than the Federal Reserve's target for consumer price increases.
The OECD slightly reduced its growth forecast for China — which was hit with triple-digit U.S. tariffs that have been temporarily lowered — from 4.8% to 4.7% this year.
Another country with a sizeable downgrade is Japan. The OECD cut the country's growth forecast from 1.1% to 0.7%.
The outlook for the eurozone economy, however, remains intact at 1% growth.
"There is the risk that protectionism and trade policy uncertainty will increase even further and that additional trade barriers might be introduced," Pereira wrote.
"According to our simulations, additional tariffs would further reduce global growth prospects and fuel inflation, dampening global growth even more," he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Proposes Policies That Would Increase the Soaring National Debt
Trump Proposes Policies That Would Increase the Soaring National Debt

Yomiuri Shimbun

time20 minutes ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Trump Proposes Policies That Would Increase the Soaring National Debt

Tom Brenner/For The Washington Post President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk speak with reporters in the Oval Office on Friday. President Donald Trump is pursuing an agenda that would add trillions of dollars to the soaring national debt, ignoring warnings from Wall Street, Republican deficit hawks and his outgoing cost-cutting champion. Though Trump ran for office in part on pledges to slash the size of the federal government and rein in the debt, his record so far has been less fiscally disciplined. His administration this week asked Congress to cancel a little more than $9 billion in spending in the current fiscal year – a fraction of a federal budget that has grown to nearly $7 trillion. The government has already spent nearly $170 billion more in the fiscal year that began in October than it did by this point in the previous year. The tariffs that the White House has said would produce a gusher of new revenue face an uncertain future, challenged in court and subject to revision as Trump negotiates with foreign trading partners. And while Trump has proposed cutting agency spending by $163 billion in the coming fiscal year, even that reduction in some programs would have little effect on overall spending, which is driven primarily by social safety net programs. The national debt now sits at $36.2 trillion, after sharp increases under Trump and President Joe Biden. The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which advocates for deficit reduction, estimates that Biden approved $4.7 trillion in new 10-year borrowing, while Trump approved $8.4 trillion during his first term, including $3.6 trillion in emergency pandemic relief. Now Trump and congressional Republicans are racing to approve his One Big Beautiful Bill, which would extend his expensive 2017 tax cuts, end taxes on tips and overtime wages, increase deductions for state and local taxes, and increase spending on immigration enforcement. 'This debt wave coming looks almost insurmountable. I'm not sure why [the Trump administration] is pushing it,' said Chris Rupkey, the chief economist at FWD Bonds. 'They're trying to do too many things at the start of the administration when, with the deficit they inherited, there's just no room to increase it.' The White House says those policies will usher in a 'golden age' of economic growth that will reduce the deficit despite the loss of tax revenue. 'This bill is a remedy to fiscal futility because we have historic reforms that are on the verge of being enacted at a size and a level that is historic,' White House budget director Russell Vought told reporters Wednesday. 'I think it is a response directly to the credit agencies saying and arguing that this town can produce nothing other than debt and deficits.' But many independent economists find that projection implausible, arguing that a rising national debt threatens to dampen economic growth and crowd out private-sector investment. On Wednesday, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projected that the legislation would require $2.4 trillion in additional borrowing over the next decade. The measure's price tag has provoked increasing worry among some economists, investors, GOP lawmakers – even Elon Musk, the billionaire who until last week led the White House's cost-cutting effort, the U.S. DOGE Service. Musk on Tuesday called Trump's bill 'a disgusting abomination' that would burden the country with 'crushingly unsustainable debt.' He later wrote on X, his social media platform, that 'a new spending bill should be drafted that doesn't massively grow the deficit' and complained that the measure would increase the legal cap on borrowing 'by 5 TRILLION DOLLARS.' Musk is not alone. Wall Street bankers and executives have privately warned the Trump administration that their tax bill could stoke investor anxiety about rising deficits, push up U.S. borrowing costs and damage the broader economy. In late May, the CBO warned that the debt is spiraling toward dangerous levels: If annual discretionary spending and federal revenue remain at historical averages, the debt would exceed 250 percent of economic output by 2055, far outstripping the nation's record debt-to-GDP ratio from the aftermath of World War II. Federal spending is mostly driven by social safety net programs, such as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and veteran care. The recent run-up in the debt is largely the result of those programs colliding with years of tax cuts. As increasing numbers of Americans retire, government revenue – mostly from income and payroll taxes – is far from enough to make good on benefits payments, forcing the government to borrow to make up the leftover cost. Democrats in Congress – and Trump – have pledged not to reduce benefits in many such programs, leaving little room to slow spending. After the U.S. entered two wars in the Middle East and passed tax cuts under the Bush, Obama and Trump administrations, debt skyrocketed. As Trump ran against Biden for a second term during the worst price inflation in generations, he promised to reduce federal spending dramatically, ending trillions of dollars in spending on pandemic response and other economic stimulus measures. Investors cautiously cheered Trump's election with the hope that widespread government deregulation – and tax cuts – would boost private-sector profits and lead to growth. But any expansion has been tempered, economists say, since the GOP has opted to finance the tax and spending policy by borrowing more – and Trump's tariffs have depressed consumer demand. Financial markets have shown some jitters over the U.S. debt burden. Yields on 10- and 30-year Treasury bonds have neared alarming benchmarks, signaling investor anxiety over the country's financial health. Moody's, a leading credit rating firm, downgraded the federal government's rating last month, citing Washington's failure to tame growing deficits. Some Republicans, too, are sounding the alarm. Reps. Thomas Massie (Kentucky) and Warren Davidson (Ohio) voted against the tax legislation last month because of fiscal concerns. It narrowly passed the House over objections from deficit hawks, many of whom ultimately backed the measure. The Senate is now haggling over the legislation's price tag while hoping to pass it in time for Trump to sign it into law before Independence Day. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisconsin) has loudly opposed the measure, asserting that it does not do enough to reduce the deficit. He said he recently texted a chart to Trump showing how much average deficits have risen since President George W. Bush's administration and how much CBO projects they will rise in the future. He also showed him a copy in person Wednesday during a White House meeting with other Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee, he said. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-South Dakota) told reporters after the meeting that there was 'quite a bit' of discussion on the deficit in the meeting. Johnson said that he was 'not a real fan' of the CBO's estimates but that he was relying on its projections. 'We have to have some base numbers we agree on,' Johnson said. Phillip Swagel, the CBO's director, wrote Wednesday in a letter to Senate Democrats that the budget office estimates that Trump's tariffs policies as of May 13 would cut the deficit by $2.8 trillion over 10 years. The estimate takes into account the CBO's finding that the tariffs would shrink the size of the economy – but it does not consider how much Trump and his successors are likely to revise the on-again, off-again tariffs over the next decade, or whether the courts will allow them to stand. White House officials and Republican leaders in Congress have argued that Trump's bill will reduce deficits by encouraging economic growth. The legislation, economists have found, probably will spur market expansion, but far from enough to pay for the gargantuan cost of the package. 'All the modeling that we've seen suggests that the changes that are being made in the tax policy – particularly making permanent bonus depreciation, interest deductibility, R&D expensing – are going to lead to significant growth,' Thune told reporters. 'And you couple the growth with the biggest spending reduction in American history, and you will see a reduction, not an increase, in the deficit.' Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, told The Washington Post that his outlook was 'like opposite day.' 'By all serious accounts, and under all credible dynamic growth estimates, this bill will add massively to the already out-of-control national debt,' she said.

After courting and criticizing Trump from afar, Merz now set to meet U.S. leader
After courting and criticizing Trump from afar, Merz now set to meet U.S. leader

Japan Times

timean hour ago

  • Japan Times

After courting and criticizing Trump from afar, Merz now set to meet U.S. leader

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has veered between boasting about common ground with U.S. President Donald Trump to bemoaning the U.S. leader's volatility and even mocking his bravado. Now, for the first time, he gets to deal with him face to face. After nearly a month in office and following weeks of negotiations, the 69-year-old conservative will travel to Washington for his inaugural meeting with Trump on Thursday. Past meetings between the two countries' leaders have often been formalities to reinforce their unshakable postwar partnership. This time is different. Stiff tariffs are looming for German exporters in Trump's trade dispute with the European Union, while American support for Ukraine in its defense against Russia's invasion hangs in the balance. A positive meeting might take some of the heat out of these issues, but the bigger risk is that tensions could boil over, setting back transatlantic ties even further. The chancellor is preparing for anything, according to an official familiar with the discussions in the chancellery in Berlin. Scenarios range from hearty handshakes like with French President Emmanuel Macron to the public berating received by Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said the person who asked not to be identified because the talks are private. Merz, who hadn't served in government before starting his term on May 6, is well aware his encounter with Trump will be delicate and has sought tips from more seasoned veterans. In recent weeks, he's spoken to a number of European leaders, including Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Finland's President Alexander Stubb. With just weeks until the president has threatened to implement sweeping 50% tariffs on all European goods, the timing of the trip is critical. The EU and the U.S. are headed in the "right direction' in trade talks, though new American levies on steel and aluminum imports aren't helpful if both sides want to maintain momentum, Maros Sefcovic said. "Our goal is to maintain the momentum,' the bloc's trade commissioner added Wednesday after meeting with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Paris. Ahead of the trip to Washington, Merz has been advised to let Trump do most of the talking, according to the German official. Interruptions are a no-no, but if he does, he should be prepared to soften it with praise, the person said. The chancellor, who can be prickly and combative, has made it clear internally that he won't openly confront the U.S. president like Zelenskyy did, the person added. After clamping down on irregular migration and vowing to ramp up defense spending, Merz has taken steps to counter views in Washington that German leadership is weak, according to Sudha David-Wilp, a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund. "He comes to the White House with less baggage,' she said. "Both leaders could write a new script together.' German Chancellor Friedrich Merz (left) looks on during a news conference in Paris on May 7. U.S. President Donald Trump (right) gestures as he arrives at the National Memorial Day Observance in Arlington, Virginia, on May 26. | AFP-JIJI In addition to geopolitical jeopardy, there's a lot at stake domestically. Merz's conservative bloc holds only a narrow lead in the polls over the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which has been staunchly supported by Trump officials. The anti-immigration party is watching closely and wants Merz to break with Brussels to resolve the trade dispute with Trump, which the head of the Christian Democratic Union has rejected. "We shouldn't act as if German and EU interests are identical,' Beatrix von Storch, deputy leader of the AfD's parliamentary group, said in a video posted on social media. "We'll judge his visit on the extent he represents German interests in his discussion with Trump.' Recently, Merz seemed to mock Trump. When asked during a conference appearance how his first phone call went, the German leader mimicked the U.S. president's voice, drawing laughter from the crowd, and said that every second or third word out of the president's mouth was "great.' Merz, a former corporate lawyer, had long thought that he would get along with Trump because both have a business background, play golf and share a patriarchal outlook. They also both have an aversion for Angela Merkel. Merz's grudge stems from 2002, when the former chancellor ousted him as caucus leader. Trump famously avoided a handshake with her during an Oval Office meeting in his first term. During the campaign in early January, Merz — a longtime advocate for transatlantic relations — called Trump "very predictable' and a leader who "thinks what he says and he does what he says.' But Merz's optimism started to shift after Vice President JD Vance accused Germany of political repression by monitoring the AfD as a potential extremist group. His disillusionment showed on election night, when Merz said that Germany could no longer rely on the U.S. and that Europe needed to stand on its own. But with China expanding its influence and Russia's war against Ukraine still raging, the U.S. remains an indispensable ally for Germany, and Merz will be keen to strengthen that relationship. Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul expressed optimism that Merz's meeting with Trump will lead to a common understanding on key issues. "Ultimately, the U.S. cannot have any interest in Russia emerging victorious from its war of aggression against Ukraine' and in China benefiting from the transatlantic trade dispute, he said at an event in Berlin late Tuesday. That puts the spotlight on Merz and how he navigates the biggest test of his chancellorship so far, but he may be able to claim victory in Washington simply by not losing. "You can't chat with him; every encounter is a competition,' Merkel said in an interview with Spiegel magazine about her experience dealing with Trump. "The more people there were in the room, the greater his urge to be the winner.'

Alphabet CEO expects to keep hiring engineers while AI advances
Alphabet CEO expects to keep hiring engineers while AI advances

Japan Times

timean hour ago

  • Japan Times

Alphabet CEO expects to keep hiring engineers while AI advances

Alphabet's Sundar Pichai said his company will keep expanding its engineering ranks at least into 2026, stressing human talent remains key even as Google's parent ramps up artificial intelligence investments. Speaking at the Bloomberg Tech conference in San Francisco, Pichai said he will continue to invest in engineering in the near future. U.S. tech leaders like Microsoft have trimmed more staff this year, reflecting in part the enormous investments needed to ensure leadership in AI. The firings have stoked fears about the technology replacing certain job functions. Google, itself, has conducted rounds of layoffs in recent years to free up resources.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store