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Home News Business

US economy shrinks in first quarter

Xenia. W by Xenia. W
30 April 2025
in Business, News
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The American economy shrank at a 0.3 percent annual pace from January through March, the first drop in three years, as US President Donald Trump’s trade wars disrupted business.

First-quarter growth was slowed by a surge in imports as companies in the United States tried to bring in foreign goods before Trump imposed massive tariffs.

The January-March drop in gross domestic product, the nation’s output of goods and services, reversed a 2.4 percent gain in the last three months of 2024.

Imports grew at a 41 percent pace, fastest since 2020, and shaved 5 percentage points off first-quarter growth.

Consumer spending also slowed sharply – 1.8 percent growth from 4 percent in October-December last year.

Federal government spending plunged 5.1 percent in the first quarter.

Forecasters surveyed by the data firm FactSet had, on average, expected the economy to eke out 0.8 percent growth in the first quarter, but many expected GDP to fall.

Financial markets sank on the report. The Dow Jones tumbled 400 points at the opening bell shortly after the GDP numbers were released. The S&P 500 dropped 1.5 percent and the Nasdaq composite fell 2 percent.

Business investment rose at a 21.9 percent clip as companies poured money into equipment. And a category within the GDP data that measures the economy’s underlying strength rose at a healthy 3 percent annual rate from January through March, up from 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2024. This category includes consumer spending and private investment but excludes volatile items like exports, inventories and government spending.

The surge in imports – fastest since 1972 outside Covid-19 economic disruptions – is likely to reverse in the second quarter, removing a weight on GDP.

For that reason, Paul Ashworth of Capital Economics forecasts that April-June growth will rebound to a 2 percent gain.

But many economists say that Trump’s massive import taxes – the erratic way he’s rolled them out – will hurt growth in the second half of the year and that recession risks are rising.

Wednesday’s report also showed an increase in prices that is likely to worry the US Federal Reserve which is still trying to cool inflation after a severe pandemic run-up.

The Fed’s favoured inflation gauge – the personal consumption expenditures, or PCE, price index – rose at an annual rate of 3.6 percent, up from 2.4 percent in the fourth quarter. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called core PC inflation registered 3.5 percent, compared with 2.6 percent from October-December.

The central bank wants to see inflation at 2 percent.

The first-quarter GDP numbers “highlight the bind that the Federal Reserve is in,” Ryan Sweet of Oxford Economics wrote in a commentary. The Fed must weigh whether to cut interest rates to support economic growth or leave rates high because of elevated inflation. “The economy was essentially stagnant in the first three months of the year while growth in headline and core inflation accelerated, fanning concerns of stagflation.’’

Trump inherited a solid economy that had grown steadily despite high interest rates imposed by the Fed in 2022 and 2023 to fight inflation. His erratic trade policies – including 145 percent tariffs on China – have paralysed businesses and threatened to raise prices and hurt consumers.

Democrats were quick to blame Trump for disrupting several years of solid economic growth. Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts said: “100 days into his presidency, Donald Trump’s red-light, green-light tariffs are shrinking our economy, with businesses stockpiling imports in anticipation of tariff doomsday.″

There is potential evidence emerging that the solid job market, a pillar of the US economy during the pandemic recession, may be weakening.

On Wednesday, payroll provider ADP reported that companies added just 62,000 jobs in April, about half of what was expected, and down from 147,000 in March. That could be a signal that businesses may be taking a more cautious approach to hiring amid uncertainty over tariffs. (AP)

Tags: BusinessFinance
Xenia. W

Xenia. W

Xenia is a Hong Kong–based writer and content creator focusing on financial markets, policy and the city’s evolving economic landscape. With over ten years of experience in higher education and tourism‑related projects, she specialises in transforming complex information into clear, reader‑friendly insights for both professional and general audiences. ​ Drawing on a background in bilingual Chinese–English translation and editing, Xenia writes across topics including Hong Kong and US stocks, market structure, macro trends and how policy shifts affect everyday investors.

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