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Economy

“A Self-Inflicted Crisis”—Experts Warn Trump’s Tariffs Are Making Everything Worse

Dolon Mondal
Last updated: June 3, 2025 2:40 pm
Dolon Mondal
Trump's tariffs

The numbers are in—Trump’s tariffs are hitting harder than expected.
The OECD has just cut its global growth forecast for 2025 to 2.9%, down from 3.3% in 2024. The US is taking the worst hit, with growth expected to drop from 2.8% to 1.6%. That’s a massive downgrade from what they projected just a few months ago.

A Self-Inflicted Slowdown

According to the OECD, Trump’s trade policies—especially the wave of tariffs—have created uncertainty across global markets. Businesses are holding back. Investments are slowing down. Trade partners are thinking twice. And inflation? It’s creeping up again.

The story isn’t just about economics. It’s about confidence.
Tariffs may look tough on paper, but in reality, they scare off investors, strain global supply chains, and end up raising costs for consumers. Protectionism sounds patriotic—until your monthly budget doesn’t stretch as far.

Recession Is a Bigger Risk Now

The OECD says this slowdown could worsen.
Why? Because America’s trading partners might hit back. That could spark a cycle of retaliation, financial market jitters, and even more policy confusion.

Here’s the kicker: even if Trump stopped the tariffs today, the damage wouldn’t vanish overnight. Business leaders are still nervous. Growth doesn’t snap back like a rubber band—especially not in this climate of uncertainty.

Also Read U.S. Steel Imports to Face 50% Tariff Under New Trump Plan Starting June 4

US: The Epicenter of Trouble

Beyond tariffs, other Trump-era policies aren’t helping.
Limits on immigration and a shrinking federal workforce are also weighing on the economy. And with the economy slowing, the US budget deficit is growing, despite revenue from tariffs and spending cuts.

Inflation? Still rising.
The Fed is expected to hold off on interest rate cuts until 2026. That means borrowing costs stay high—and recovery stays slow.

The World Feels It Too

Globally, countries are now spending more on defense, climate, and care for aging populations. But with slower growth and rising inflation, that money has to come from somewhere.

The OECD’s advice?
Cut non-essential spending and broaden the tax base. Translation: stop the fiscal bleeding before it spreads.

Trump’s tariffs were meant to protect the US.
Instead, they’re choking it—and pulling the rest of the world down with it.

Also Read Trump Draws Red Line: ‘Zero Uranium Enrichment’ for Iran in Any Nuclear Deal

TAGGED:TrumpTrump’s tariffs
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