- U.S. GDP shrank for the first time in three years during Q1 2025. The primary cause was a surge in imports as American companies rushed to purchase foreign products ahead of anticipated Trump tariffs, which negatively impacted GDP calculations.k
- The economy rebounded with healthy 3.8% growth in Q2. This recovery was partly driven by a drop in imports, reflecting both the impact of implemented tariffs and the fact that importers had already stockpiled goods in the first quarter.
- Economic expansion accelerated to 4.4% in Q3, outpacing the previous quarter. The continued decline in imports and robust consumer spending were the main drivers of this strong performance.
- Trump's tariffs and threats of tariffs delivered inconsistent outcomes across the first three quarters of 2025, with initial contraction followed by strong rebounds, demonstrating the complex economic impact of trade policy.
- Despite tariff uncertainties and trade tensions, strong consumer spending remained a crucial pillar supporting economic growth throughout the latter half of 2025, helping to offset import-related volatility.
Trump also likes point to solid gains in the U.S. stock market. He noted that stocks hit new highs 52 times in 2025. It’s true that the American stock market did well last year. But it underperformed many foreign stock markets. The benchmark S&P 500 index climbed 17% — a nice gain but short of a 71% surge in South Korea, 29% in Hong Kong, 26% in Japan, 22% in Germany and 21% in the United Kingdom.
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