
US GDP Falls as Trump’s Trade Policies Shake Markets
The United States economy showed contraction during the first quarter of 2025 based on 0.3% GDP decline figures, which the Commerce Department disclosed on Wednesday. The latest economic performance represents the worst contraction since 2022 because it surpassed economic forecasts of 0.8% growth. Financial markets delivered negative reactions to the news, which caused major indexes to drop at market open. Both the Dow and S&P 500 dropped 1% while the Nasdaq lost 2.2% in a day of market decline.
The contraction stems primarily from:
- A widening trade deficit with imports surging 41.3%
- Reduced government spending (-5.1%)
- Slowed consumer spending (1.8%, down from 4%)
President Trump explained the economic decline through “Biden ‘Overhang’” on his social media before requesting patience and stating that the economy “will boom” without any impact from tariffs.
Expert economic analysis indicates Trump’s tough sanction policies place the economy in danger since they could cause an economic slide, according to Gregory Daco of Ernst & Young.
A minor set of brightening indicators slowly appeared as the economy moved ahead. Business expenditures jumped to 9.8% due to companies expediting their buying activities to prevent increased costs from prospective tariff policies. The economy demonstrated positive momentum through the slight acceleration of the final sales to private domestic purchasers figure reaching 3%.
According to ADP data analyzed independently, private companies created only 62,000 jobs during April while they had added 147,000 positions the month prior.