US economy shrank 0.5% in the first quarter, worse than earlier
estimates had revealed
[June 27, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. economy shrank at a 0.5% annual pace from
January through March as President Donald Trump’s trade wars disrupted
business, the Commerce Department reported Thursday in an unexpected
deterioration of earlier estimates.
First-quarter growth was weighed down by a surge of imports as U.S.
companies, and households, rushed to buy foreign goods before Trump
could impose tariffs on them. The Commerce Department previously
estimated that the economy fell 0.2% in the first quarter. Economists
had forecast no change in the department's third and final estimate.
The January-March drop in gross domestic product — the nation’s output
of goods and services — reversed a 2.4% increase in the last three
months of 2024 and marked the first time in three years that the economy
contracted. Imports expanded 37.9%, fastest since 2020, and pushed GDP
down by nearly 4.7 percentage points.
Consumer spending also slowed sharply, expanding just 0.5%, down from a
robust 4% in the fourth-quarter of last year. It is a significant
downgrade from the Commerce Department's previous estimate.
Consumers have turned jittery since Trump started plastering big taxes
on imports, anticipating that the tariffs will impact their finances
directly.
And the Conference Board reported this week that Americans’ view of the
U.S. economy worsened in June, resuming a downward slide that had
dragged consumer confidence in April to its lowest level since the
COVID-19 pandemic five years ago.

The Conference Board said Tuesday that its consumer confidence index
slid to 93 in June, down 5.4 points from 98.4 last month. A measure of
Americans’ short-term expectations for their income, business conditions
and the job market fell 4.6 points to 69. That’s well below 80, the
marker that can signal a recession ahead.
Former Federal Reserve economist Claudia Sahm said “the downward
revision to consumer spending today is a potential red flag.'' Sahm, now
chief economist at New Century Advisors, noted that Commerce downgraded
spending on recreation services and foreign travel — which could have
reflect ”great consumer pessimism and uncertainty.''
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The per-gallon price is illuminated on the pump at a Costco
warehouse gasoline station Tuesday, April 1, 2025, in Thornton,
Colo. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)
 A category within the GDP data that
measures the economy’s underlying strength rose at a 1.9% annual
rate from January through March. It's a decent number, but down from
2.9% in the fourth quarter of 2024 and from the Commerce
Department's previous estimate of 2.5% January-March growth.
This category includes consumer spending and private investment but
excludes volatile items like exports, inventories and government
spending.
And federal government spending fell at a 4.6% annual pace, the
biggest drop since 2022.
In another sign that Trump's policies are disrupting trade,
Trade deficits reduce GDP. But that’s just a matter of mathematics.
GDP is supposed to count only what’s produced domestically, not
stuff that comes in from abroad. So imports — which show up in the
GDP report as consumer spending or business investment — have to be
subtracted out to keep them from artificially inflating domestic
production.
The first-quarter import influx likely won’t be repeated in the
April-June quarter and therefore shouldn’t weigh on GDP. In fact,
economists expect second-quarter growth to bounce back to 3% in the
second quarter, according to a survey of forecasters by the data
firm FactSet.
The first look at April-June GDP growth is due July 30.
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