Donald Trump dodges US recession question as trade war implications do


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Donald Trump has not ruled out a recession in the United States this year, saying the world’s largest economy is in “transition” through his trade war.

Financial markets have been spooked by the implications of his early trade fights involving the country’s nearest partners Canada and Mexico through on-off tariffs of up to 25%.

China has also been targeted and the European Union could be next, from 2 April, when Mr Trump has promised to ramp up his “America first” ambitions.

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The recession question first cropped up a week ago when a closely-watched economic indicator suggested the US economy was shrinking at its fastest pace since the COVID pandemic.

The Atlanta Federal Reserve’s GDPNow model showed activity shrinking in the current first quarter, even before the president took office as the threat of tariffs loomed large.

Other indicators show signs for concern, with the US unemployment rate ticking up in February to 4.1%, according to official data on Friday.

The stock market sell-off of last week left the broad S&P 500 trading at near six-month lows.

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‘Trump slump’ hits stock markets

The dollar has suffered too, with sterling and the euro gaining four cents since the end of February.

They are hardly the headlines Mr Trump wants.

He was asked directly in a Fox News interview on Sunday whether he was expecting a recession.

Crucially, he did not deny the possibility in his reply when he said: “I hate to predict things like that. There is a period of transition because what we’re doing is very big, we’re bringing wealth back to America. That’s a big…


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