The trade war strains the U.S. and Japanese economies, while China faces declining exports. U.S. economic slowdown is evident with falling consumer confidence; Japan adopts cautious rate hikes, and China’s inflation turns negative.
Key takeaways
- The U.S. economy is slowing amid weak consumer confidence, trade tensions, and financial market declines, prompting expectations of Fed rate cuts by mid-year.
- Japan’s fragile recovery faces headwinds from weak household spending and trade risks, likely delaying the BOJ’s rate hikes until late 2025.
- China’s economic slowdown, driven by deflation, weak exports, and trade war pressures, threatens future growth despite government stimulus efforts.
The U.S. economy is showing increasing signs of a slowdown amid uncertainty surrounding former President Donald Trump’s economic and trade policies.
Inflation eased further in February, with headline inflation dropping to 2.8% year-on-year from 3% in January, while core inflation slowed to 3.1% from 3.3%. Consumer confidence also took a hit, with the index plunging to 57.9 in March, its lowest level since July 2022.
The sharp decline reflects growing concerns over the economy, exacerbated by new tariffs and immigration policies.
Financial markets have responded negatively to these economic signals. Over the past 3-4 weeks, U.S. stock markets have fallen by more than 8%, weighed down by weak services PMI data, rising delinquency rates, sluggish job growth, and slowing wage increases.
With mounting pressure from trade tensions, tighter financial conditions, and a cooling labor market, Krungsri Research forecasts that the Federal Reserve will begin cutting interest rates by mid-year.
A total rate cut of 75 basis points is expected, bringing the benchmark rate down to 3.50-3.75% by the end of 2025. However, uncertainty over tariffs and persistent inflation risks could lead the Fed to hold rates steady at its upcoming policy meeting.
Japan’s economy remains fragile, prompting the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to take a cautious approach to rate hikes. Weak data from the manufacturing and export sectors suggest that the central bank may delay its planned tightening at the March 19 meeting.
Household spending growth slowed sharply to 0.8% year-on-year in January, down from 2.7% in the previous month. Meanwhile, GDP grew by 0.6% quarter-on-quarter in Q4 2024, with capital expenditures rebounding slightly after a prior contraction.
However, private consumption stalled, recording 0% growth compared to 0.7% in the previous quarter.
Despite these challenges, Japan’s economy is expected to gradually recover throughout 2025, supported by the highest wage hike in 34 years, averaging 5.46%, improving business sentiment, and government stimulus measures.
However, slowing household spending, stagnant real wages, and declining manufacturing PMI along with escalating trade war risks, could push the BOJ to postpone rate hikes until the second half of the year, when economic recovery gains more traction.
China’s economic recovery remains fragile, with the ongoing U.S.-China trade war weighing on exports. In February, inflation turned negative for the first time in over a year, with headline inflation at -0.7% year-on-year, compared to 0.5% in January.
Core inflation also dropped to -0.1% from 0.6%, while producer prices remained weak at -2.2%. Exports have slowed significantly, growing just 2.3% year-on-year in January-February, down from 6-13% growth in Q4 2024.
The decline is partly due to seasonal factors, but U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods, effective since February 4 are adding further pressure. Analysts estimate that a 20% tariff on all Chinese imports, combined with China’s retaliatory tariffs of 10-15%, could reduce China’s exports by 2.15% and GDP by 0.21%. Sectors most at risk include electronics, electrical equipment, and construction.
Private consumption is also under pressure. Consumer confidence declined in February, reflecting weaker purchasing power among low-income earners.
In response, the government has approved a THB 27 billion digital wallet program for individuals aged 16-20 years, aiming to boost spending. However, overall economic momentum remains sluggish, with trade tensions casting a shadow over future growth prospects.
Thailand’s consumer confidence took a downturn in February, with the index falling to 57.8 from 59.0 in January—the first decline in five months.
Key concerns include Thailand’s slow economic recovery, domestic political uncertainty, and rising global trade tensions.
The consumer confidence index remains well below its pre-COVID average of 75.5 in 2019, indicating weak domestic consumption.
This comes despite government stimulus efforts, such as a THB 10,000 cash handout for over 3 million elderly individuals and an upcoming THB 10,000 digital wallet program for young adults, expected to be distributed between June and July slow economic growth, prompting the Chinese government to consider stimulus measures. Collectively, these factors create a complex web of challenges that pose significant risks for the global economy.