#USChinaTensions
How will the latest tariffs impact global trade
**Impact of Latest Tariffs on Global Trade**
**1. Trade Volume Contraction**
The WTO projects a **0.2% decline in global merchandise trade** for 2025, reversing earlier growth forecasts. Combined risks (reciprocal tariffs + uncertainty) could deepen this to a **1.5% drop**, marking the sharpest decline in over a decade. North America faces a **>10% trade contraction**, while Asia/Europe may see modest growth.
**2. Economic Growth Slowdown**
Global growth is expected to slump to **2.3%** (near recession thresholds), down from 3.3% earlier estimates. The U.S. and China face **sub-1% and ~3.5% GDP growth**, respectively. Stagflation risks rise as tariffs spike **U.S. inflation**, limiting central banks’ ability to cut rates.
**3. Sectoral Disruptions**
- **Manufacturing**: U.S. firms face **supply chain bottlenecks** and lost foreign clients (e.g., Canadian orders for leather goods).
- **Commodities**: Tariffs on **vanilla (Madagascar)** and **cocoa (Ghana/Côte d’Ivoire)** threaten small exporters while raising U.S. consumer prices.
- **Services**: Expected growth revised down to **4%** (from ~5%) as tourism/finance sectors feel secondary effects.
**4. Uneven Global Impact**
- **Vulnerable Economies**: Tariffs on 57 nations (e.g., Cameroon, Lesotho) generate **<1% of U.S. tariff revenue** but cripple their export capacity.
- **India**: Domestic-driven demand may cushion growth at **~6%** (vs. 6.5% forecast).
- **China**: Faces **145% U.S. tariffs** on most goods, accelerating decoupling risks flagged by WTO.
**5. Market Uncertainty**
The **90-day tariff pause** offers temporary relief, but investment remains paralyzed due to policy unpredictability. Fed/ECB caution against premature rate cuts, prolonging financial market stress.