Time:2025-04-28 Popularity:123
New Orleans — The global economy is in a precarious state driven by tariff uncertainty, ramping up the likelihood of a recession in much of the Western world, an economic and geopolitical analyst for S&P Global said Thursday.
Natznet Tesfay, speaking at the Journal of Commerce’s Breakbulk and Project Cargo Conference here, said S&P Global’s base expectation is “subdued economic growth,” which would likely keep global container volumes from expanding. But the likelihood of the United States, Canada and much of Europe entering a technical recession this year, defined as two straight quarters of GDP retraction, is rising as uncertainty around US tariffs mounts, Tesfay said.
“There’s this moment we’re standing in where there’s a number of policies, and there’s boundaries and pivots of certain policies taken to reassure markets, investors and address consumer concerns,” said Tesfay, vice president of Insights and Analysis for S&P Global Market Intelligence. “Demand remains a very big concern for us.”
S&P Global is the parent company of the Journal of Commerce.
S&P’s Flash PMI for April, released Thursday, shows that the developed world’s economic output hit its lowest point since December 2023, with near stagnant or falling activity in the US, European Union, United Kingdom and Japan.
The uncertainty over US tariff policy and the resulting economic slowdown are weighing on container growth prospects, with analyst Drewry forecasting a 1% retraction in global container volumes for 2025.
S&P’s base-case scenario for the global economy envisions higher inflation pressures, less scope for monetary and fiscal stimulus, slowing growth in the US and China, and continued lagging of the eurozone. Its downside scenario would be marked by an escalation of trade protectionism, tighter-for-longer financial conditions, and concerns over debt sustainability, driving up yields.
Mark Szakonyi, Executive Editor | Apr 24, 2025, 3:37 PM EDT
Even if the US tariffs are eventually significantly reduced, Tesfay said the world had already entered a period of “conditional globalization.” “[Nation] states are increasingly involved in defining who you can trade with, on what terms and based on protecting the number of strategic actors,” she said.
Amid all the unknowns for the short-term economy, the one long-term certainty is that the role of India, Africa and Latin America in producing goods for the world is bound to grow, particularly as the US tries to reduce its dependence on Chinese imports, Tesfay said.