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Could Trump's Tariffs Cause a Worldwide Recession?
U.S. President Donald Trump’s sweeping April 2025 tariff measures sent shockwaves through financial markets while upending decades of carefully built trade relationships worldwide, marking the most significant U.S. trade policy shift in at least a century. Economic experts immediately warned that raising the average effective U.S. tariff rates from just under 1.0% to between about 22.5% and 24%, the highest since 1910, could be catastrophic for an economy that was among the few to show significant growth coming out of the pandemic.
Since “the tariff increases were significantly larger than expected,” U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said in a speech two days after their announcement, “the same is likely to be true of the economic effects, which will include higher inflation and slower growth.” George Pearkes, a macro analyst at Bespoke Investment Group, and Justin Wolfers, professor of public policy and economics at the University of Michigan, both told Investopedia the size of the tariffs significantly increased the likelihood of a recession, with JPMorgan forecasters raising their risk of a global recession to 60%.
Key Takeaways
Tariffs and the Potential for a Recession
The rationale economists give is based on several mutually reinforcing outcomes they view as likely:
If the tariffs do lead to an economic contraction, how you prepare depends on your circumstances:
Long-term investors: “Your focus right now should be structured by your time frame. For anyone in the long term—10-plus years, like retirement accounts—today’s headlines don’t matter,” Pearkes said. “Don’t try and time the market, you won’t be successful.”
Short-term investors: “For shorter-term investors, it’s hard to see a positive catalyst in the near term,” Pearkes said. “The better entries to step in and buy are likely going to come later.” In other words, those with shorter time horizons might consider maintaining higher cash positions until the markets stabilize.
Consumers: With projected price increases of 2.3% across the board and significantly higher in categories like food (2.8%) and apparel (17%), households should consider doing the following:
The Bottom Line
“Few propositions command as much consensus among professional economists as that [free] world trade increases economic growth and raises living standards,” noted Harvard economist Greg Mankiw has written. Economists now worry the April 2025 U.S. tariffs could trigger a recession. With global markets in turmoil and businesses beginning to implement layoffs, the question is how severe and widespread the pain will be. “No one wins a trade war,” Wolfers said.