Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 30th July 2025, 4:27 PM
Analysts anticipate a rebound in the United States’ economic growth for the second quarter of the year, primarily driven by trade-related distortions as businesses raced to avoid the harshest impacts of President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff regime. However, experts warn that this uptick is temporary and masks underlying fragilities in the economy.
According to consensus forecasts from Briefing.com, the US economy is projected to expand at an annualised rate of 2.5% between April and June. This represents a significant turnaround from the 0.5% contraction recorded in the first quarter.
Temporary Rebound Driven by Trade Activity
The short-term surge in GDP is largely attributed to changes in trade behaviour, particularly inventory stockpiling and import surges in anticipation of increased tariffs. Companies frontloaded purchases to sidestep rising costs, leading to an abnormal economic boost.
“It’s very much distorted by the trade flows and inventory,”
— Kathy Bostjancic, Chief Economist, Nationwide
Goldman Sachs noted that the first-quarter import surge caused the largest negative impact on GDP from net exports ever recorded. As that surge recedes, a mechanical rebound in growth was expected.
Still, Bostjancic cautioned that the boost is not sustainable, as investment and consumption — the main engines of US economic growth — are likely to weaken under the weight of tariffs and policy uncertainty.
Timeline of Tariff Measures
| Date/Period | Tariff Action |
| Campaign Period | Trump floated across-the-board tariffs targeting multiple US trading partners. |
| Post-January | Tariffs imposed on steel, aluminium, and car imports. |
| April | Specific measures targeting China led to retaliatory tariffs reaching triple-digit levels. |
| Present | A temporary trade truce reached with China following negotiations in Stockholm. |
Mounting Economic Pressures
Despite the apparent rebound, economists caution that the underlying momentum of the economy is softening:
“The US economy continues to navigate a complex set of crosscurrents, obscuring a clear reading of its underlying momentum.”
— Gregory Daco, Chief Economist, EY
Daco highlights a combination of factors weighing on the economy:
These pressures are already curbing employment, business investment, and household spending — three critical components of GDP.
Slower Growth on the Horizon
Economists advise analysing the first and second quarters collectively to gauge the real trend. According to Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics:
“The likely average growth rate of about 1.5% across Q1 and Q2 represents a clear deceleration from the 3% annual growth seen over the past two years.”
Tombs further predicts:
Summary Table: US Economic Outlook
| Economic Indicator | Q1 2025 | Q2 2025 (Forecast) | Trend/Comment |
| GDP Growth (Annualised) | -0.5% | +2.5% | Temporary bounce due to trade distortions |
| Average H1 Growth | ~1.5% | — | Below previous 3% trend |
| Expected H2 Growth | — | ~1% | Momentum to weaken further |
| Inflation Pressures | Rising | Rising | Driven by tariffs and import costs |
| Investment & Consumption | Weakening | Weakening | Due to uncertainty and higher prices |
| Key Risk Factors | Tariffs, Immigration | Policy instability, Demand erosion |
The second quarter may show a stronger headline figure, but analysts agree: the US economy is navigating turbulent waters, and the boost from trade timing is unlikely to mask longer-term challenges.
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