Global Economic Outlook - Global economic growth expectations are diminished compared to previous expectations, but a modest upward revision exists compared to April due to easing trade tensions [2][3][4] - Medium-term growth has been relatively weak and is expected to continue, with tariffs potentially exacerbating this trend [6][7] Impact of Tariffs - Tariffs are expected to be around 17% on average for the US on the rest of the world, a significant increase from less than 3% last year [5] - The depreciation of the US dollar is amplifying the tariff shock, making foreign goods more expensive and US goods more competitive [10] - Tariffs are starting to transmit into domestic prices, with importers, distributors, retailers, and eventually customers likely to bear the cost [12][13] US Economic Performance - US GDP outlook for 2025 is revised to 19%, with a slight acceleration to 2% growth in 2026, partly due to tariffs not being as severe as expected and the recent budget bill [7][9][11] - The US economy has been helped by easing financial conditions, with equity markets performing well and a depreciation of the US dollar [10] Trade Deficits and Policy - The US is concerned about its trade deficit, a legitimate concern monitored by the IMF [15][16] - Tariffs and trade policy are unlikely to significantly reduce the US's external deficits, which are primarily driven by domestic fiscal policy [17][18] - The US fiscal policy, with 6-7% public deficits, is a primary driver of the external deficit, and addressing this through fiscal policy is preferable to raising tariffs [18][19]
IMF's Gourinchas Says Tariffs Are Causing Tepid Growth
Bloomberg Televisionยท2025-07-29 16:12