“In an interview with Fox News on Sunday, Trump refused to rule out a recession for the U.S. this year, implying his tariff strategy and attempts to cut government spending were part of a necessary transition that in the short term could cause problems for the world’s biggest economy.” MarketWatch
I find it laughable that President Trump is now saying the ‘R’ word on a Sunday talk show, when one of his most famous campaign promises was that “Starting on day one, we will end inflation and make America affordable again, to bring down the prices of all goods.”
So the question to ask is, what happens next when and if he succeeds in enacting his agenda? We should know by now it isn’t words but his administration’s actions that will determine (or hinder) how much the economy and prices will grow (or shrink) this year.
In fact, Trump has inherited a fully employed and still growing economy. Prices and inflation can’t come down in such a situation because there is more demand (i.e., money in circulation) than goods available. It’s good old Economics 101 that is taught in business classes.
But economists do agree on what would bring prices down, a recession. Many economists and pundits have been looking at the Atlanta Fed’s estimates of first quarter GDP growth, and been seeing the possibility of the ‘R’ word.
Why? It’s mainly because consumers have been spending less since the holidays, in part because they are losing confidence that they may even have a job, or the ability to change jobs in the future. Why wouldn’t they lose confidence when “chainsaw Musk” cuts federal jobs with abandon and the newly jobless federal workers competing in the private sector?
That why first quarter growth estimates, such as the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow estimate have fallen.
“The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the first quarter of 2025 is -2.4 percent on March 6, up from -2.8 percent on March 3,” is their latest
That’s also why the stubbornly high inflation and interest rates are making creation of a new fiscal budget so difficult. Republicans want the tax cuts they promised to spark more spending, which is inflationary, but need Democrats to agree. Yet Democrats don’t want the cuts to social security, Medicare, and Medicaid that Trump said would never happen, but must happen for any preservation of the tax cuts enacted during Trump’s first term.
Hence there will probably be a so-called continuing resolution to keep the existing budget until end of the fiscal year in September. This will avoid a possible government shutdown, but what then?
This week’s news will be mostly about inflation, since February’s Consumer Price Index and wholesale Producer Price Index will come out that may paint a clearer inflation picture, and whether the Fed might resume cutting interest rates.
And we need not only to be talking about the prospects for higher prices from tariffs, but also the trade disruptions that tariff wars cause, because President Trump will antagonize both friend and foe in his flailing (and counterproductive) attempts to decree rather than negotiate a new foreign trade policy.
There is something seductive to many voters about a new foreign trade policy that promises to bring more jobs home. But firstly, it’s more expensive to make things in the U.S., which is why we import more than we export. And with Trump making enemies of our friends and closest allies, they will be sure to reciprocate with higher tariffs.
Trump has to know that is no way to do business from his history of bankruptcies and lawsuits. He has always chosen confrontation over cooperation to get what he wants, and the financial markets as well as consumers will soon figure this out. The only question is when, and what happens next.
Harlan Green © 2025
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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