Wednesday, December 24, 2025

US third quarter growth stumps analysts

 The US economy grew at 4.3 per cent in the third quarter on top of the 3.8 per cent growth in the second quarter.

And no, it's not fuelled entirely by AI investment. Consumer spending and exports contributed significantly to the surge. Nevertheless, the index of consumer confidence tracked by the Conference Board is at its lowest since President Trump announced his Liberation Day tariffs! 

Let the pundits figure out whether the gdp growth data is misleading or whether the consumer confidence index is flawed. President Trump is entitled to his moment of exulting:

The TARIFFS are responsible for the GREAT USA Economic Numbers JUST ANNOUNCED…AND THEY WILL ONLY GET BETTER!



Tuesday, December 23, 2025

India's ambitious plans for its navy

I have said this before: very often, you have to look to western media for serious news about India.

FT has a fascinating story on how India's plans to beef up the navy to cope with China's expansion in the Indian ocean.

The statistics are impressive. About  66 per cent of the world's oil supply of 50 per cent of container traffic passes. An estimated 95 per cent of India's own trade happens via the Indian Ocean. For China, 95 per cent of its $6 trillion trade is sea borne and most of its passes through the Indian Ocean.

India wants a powerful navy that will safeguard its maritime interests and act as a powerful level in the event of tensions with China.

Thus far, India has fallen behind on plans for the navy:

Few things capture India’s sluggish modernisation of its navy better than its vacillating plan to build up its submarine fleet. In 1999 New Delhi laid out a blueprint for building 24 new submarines over 30 years, to add to its existing fleet.  But 25 years later, only six have been built, meaning India has less than half the planned number of new conventional submarines. It has two nuclear ballistic submarines, though two more are under construction, and last year it decided to build two nuclear attack submarines, and will lease one from Russia. Of the 17 conventional submarines, 11 are over 25 years old.   

It is now making up for lost time:

India has 55 ships under construction at an approximate cost of Rs1tn ($11bn). The navy has got the government’s nod to build another 64 and hopes to get a third aircraft carrier — the second to be built within the country — but has not got a green light from the government yet. 

There is now way India can match China's naval capability: China boasts of some 250 ships at the moment and is still building frantically.

India's naval strategy, the article indicates, hinges on a few key elements.

First, China can deploy only 35 per cent of its naval assets in the Indian Ocean, so India needs to have only 1 ship for every three that China has. Secondly, India will use airbases in Mauritius and Seychelles as a counterweight to China. Thirdly, India is fortifying its position in the Nicobar islands which is close to the Malacca Straits through which 80 per cent of China's sea traffic passes.

Experts are clear about one thing. The Indian navy will strictly defend Indian interest, it will not be drawn into the conflicts of others, such as a confrontation between China and the West over Taiwan.


Saturday, December 13, 2025

A paradigm shift in US economic policy in 2025

 

America’s economic policy changed in four ways in 2025.

·    -  The Trump administration effectively ended the free trade regime

·      - It revamped immigration policy to make it far more restrictive

·      -   It withdrew from the Paris Agreement on climate change

·     -    It passed a tax bill that ensures that America’s public debt remains at a high level in the foreseeable future, if not at a record level

To me, the astonishing thing is that these dramatic shifts have failed thus far to unsettle the world economy or the financial markets. Analysts have been coming up with numerous explanations for why this is so- after predicting economic apocalypse.

In 2025, we will know who was right: Mr Trump or the pundits.

More in my article in Business Standard.

 

Four US economic policy shifts of 2025 

 

In 2025, the world saw one tectonic shift in US economic policy and at least three others that are consequential. These shifts will not be easy to reverse even if there is a change in administration in the United States (US) down the road. How exactly they will impact the US and the world is unclear at the moment. What is clear is that the rest of the world will have to adjust to them.

First, the tectonic shift. The US under President Donald Trump has decisively upended the free trade regime that has underpinned the world economy for decades.  The world has to live with a US base tariff level of 10 per cent plus an element that will vary from country to country and from time to time, depending on how the US perceives its trade relationship with that country. 

This will be reinforced by even higher tariffs for sectors, such as steel and aluminium, which are perceived to be of strategic importance to the US economy. The weighted average tariff under President Trump has risen from below 3 per cent to around 19 per cent.

 During the year, major nations settled for deals with the US that are hopelessly one-sided. The European Union (EU), for instance, faces a tariff of 15 per cent (with higher tariffs on steel and aluminium) while US exports to the US EU face zero tariff. For the privilege of doing business with the US, the EU has committed to spending an additional $750 billion on US energy products (over three years), investing $600 billion in America, and buying US military equipment worth “hundreds of billions of dollars”. 

Japan too will face a baseline tariff of 15 per cent and will invest $550 billion in the US. The United Kingdom gets away with a tariff of 10 per cent because of the “special relationship” with the US.  China has secured a one-year truce with the US that allows tariffs to settle at a staggering 47 per cent for one year. In return, China has agreed to lift restrictions on export of rare earths to the US and buy more soyabean from the US. 

Switzerland was hit with a tariff of 39 per cent. Its President rushed to the US to negotiate a lower tariff but was rebuffed. Two months later, the US agreed to reduce tariffs to 15 per cent in return for $200 billion investment from the Swiss. India’s refusal to be rushed into a trade deal looks very brave in comparison with the abject surrender of nations that are incomparably richer.

The second shift has to do with immigration policy. The US administration has clamped down on border crossings, deported thousands of illegal immigrants, paused asylum applications, and attempted to limit birthright citizenship. 

Kevin Hassett, one of Mr Trump’s economic advisers and now a frontrunner for the post of Chairman of the Federal Reserve, has argued that the issue is the quality of immigration. He notes that the United States admits only 12 per cent of its immigrants on the basis of employment and skills, whereas 63 per cent of those admitted by Canada and 68 per cent of those admitted by Australia are selected for the skills they bring to these countries.

Mr Trump himself has lately spoken of the importance of H1B visas and foreign students in US universities. But the National Security Strategy document released by the White House recently makes the basic stance clear: “The era of mass migration is over”. There will be no retreat from the view that migration strains domestic resources, undermines social cohesion and threatens national security. 

A third shift is the Trump administration’s rejection of climate change and green energy as priorities. One of Mr Trump’s first acts after taking over as President in January 2025 was to withdraw from the Paris Agreement that committed all signatories to time-bound emission reduction plans. Mr Trump often calls climate change a “hoax” or a “con job”, renewable energy a “joke” and talks of “clean, beautiful coal”. 

The Trump administration is actively working to dismantle subsidies for renewable energy and electric vehicles, instead opening up more land and waters for oil drilling — “drill, baby, drill” is the motto.  The National Security Strategy document declares emphatically, “We reject the disastrous ‘climate change’ and ‘Net Zero’ ideologies that have so greatly harmed Europe, threaten the United States, and subsidize our adversaries.”

Mr Trump’s actions will mean higher costs for the rest of the world in battling climate change. It will also mean fewer resources with which to battle it as the Trump administration axes billions of dollars that support climate change projects. It could result in other nations withdrawing from the Paris Agreement as they view the burdens imposed on them as unfair.

A fourth shift is the rise in the level of public debt in the US as well as in other advanced countries. Public debt in the US and other advanced countries has risen relentlessly since the global financial crisis of 2007, and had averaged 104 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) even before the pandemic struck in 2020. Mr Trump passed his Big Beautiful Bill that retained the tax cuts of Trump-1 and boosted defence expenditure. The International Monetary Fund projects US government debt to rise from 122 per cent of GDP in 2024 to 143 per cent by 2030. The corresponding figures for advanced economy debt are 109 per cent and 119 per cent, respectively.  

Commentators worry that rising public debt in advanced countries poses a threat to macroeconomic instability in the global economy. Mr Trump’s economic advisors, however, believe that faster economic growth, tariff revenues and lower interest rates will cause government debt to fall to 94 per cent by 2034. That is one forecast that will be watched closely. But clearly, the dogma about the unsustainability of high levels of public debt that advanced countries preached to the developing world has gone out of the window.

As the year draws to a close, the astonishing thing is that these massive shifts in economic policy have thus far failed to seriously unsettle the US economy or the world economy or the financial markets. The IMF projects growth in the world economy for 2025 at 3.2 per cent, just 20 basis points below last year’s. The US will grow at 2 per cent, compared to 2.8 per cent last year. US inflation is running at 2.8 per cent, which is way below what was feared following Mr Trump’s Liberation Day announcements. 

The US equity market touched an all-time high during the year, with a return of 13 per cent over the year. The yield on the one-year G-Sec in the US is a full 50 basis points below its level when Mr Trump assumed office. Pundits, who predicted economic apocalypse, are trying to find reasons why their forecasts went wrong. 

Has the moment of reckoning been merely deferred? Or is Mr Trump on to something? We should know for sure in 2026. 

 


Tuesday, December 09, 2025

US National Security Strategy document is hawkish on China and soft on India

The US National Security Strategy document was released a few days ago by the White House. I read media reports that said the document regarded China merely as an economic competitor, not an existential threat. And that India did not seem to matter.

The reports are wrong. The report is  hawkish on China and - this will gladden Indian hearts- it does see India as a counter-weight to China in the region.

Let me first highlight the positions the document takes with respect to China:

1. China has emerged as a threat to the rules-based international order.

President Trump single-handedly reversed more than three decades of mistaken American assumptions about China: namely, that by opening our markets to China, encouraging American business to invest in China, and outsourcing our manufacturing to China, we would facilitate China’s entry into the so-called “rulesbased international order.” This did not happen. 

2. No change in the US policy of preserving Taiwan's independence

 Given that one-third of global shipping  passes annually through the South China Sea, this has major implications for the U.S. economy. Hence deterring a conflict over Taiwan, ideally by preservingmilitary overmatch, is a priority. We will also maintain our longstanding declaratory policy on Taiwan, meaning that the United States does not support any unilateral change to the status quo in the Taiwan Strait.

2. Restrictions on trade with China will continue, both through tariffs and through export controls.

Since the Chinese economy reopened to the world in 1979, commercial relations between our two countries have been and remain fundamentally unbalanced. .......Going forward, we will rebalance America’s economic relationship with China, prioritizing reciprocity and fairness to restore American economic independence.Trade with China should be balanced and focused on non-sensitive factors.

 If that is not hawkish, I don't know what is.

The tone towards India is distinctly friendly.  

1. India remains an important partner in preventing  China's dominance in the Indo-Pacific region.

We must continue to improve commercial (and other) relations with India to encourage New Delhi to contribute to Indo-Pacific security, including through continued quadrilateral cooperation with Australia, Japan, and the United States (“the Quad”).

2. The economic partnership with India too is important 

President Trump’s May 2025 state visits to Persian Gulf countries demonstrated the power and appeal of American technology. There, the President won the Gulf States’ support for America’s superior AI technology, deepening our partnerships. America should similarly enlist our European and Asian allies and partners, including India, to cement and improve our joint positions in the Western  Hemisphere and, with regard to critical minerals, in Africa.

Not exactly effusive about India but friendly in tone. At least India is spared the harsh comments the document for America's allies in Europe. 


Saturday, December 06, 2025

Key Supreme Court rulings awaited in the US

 In the months ahead, the US Supreme Court will pronounce on some truly important matters:

i. Trump tariffs: Is President Trump justified in using emergency powers to impose tariffs? Or is that the remit of the US Congress? If the Court rules against the Trump adminstration, the US  government will have to return billions in tariffs imposed so far. Legal experts say the President has recourse to several statutes for imposing tariffs, so he will prevail even if the Court rules against him.

ii. Birthright citizenship: Does being born in the US confer citizenship automatically? The Trump administration says it doesn't apply to illegal immigrants nor children born of those temporarily visiting the US.

iii. Can Trump fire officials of the Federal Reserve?: Trump fired Fed Governor Lisa Cook on the ground that she had committed mortgage fraud without such fraud being proved in a court of law.  A lower court judge blocked the order. The administration then sought to prevent Cook from attending office until the case was decided but the US Court of Appeals ruled against it. The Court has indicated that it is inclined to treat the Fed differently from other government agencies that enjoy autonomy.

Wednesday, December 03, 2025

"Putin ready to fight Europe"

 "We are ready to fight Europe - Putin"- that's the headline you would have seen in the media this morning.

Warmonger! you would have said to yourself.

Except that the complete statement from Putin was, "If Europe wants war, we are ready to fight Europe".

That's how the media distorts. 

Tuesday, December 02, 2025

India's labour reforms: more ease of business but greater cost of labour

India's long-awaited labour reforms make for greater ease of business. They reduce compliance costs for large firms  but will add to costs for small and medium firms and also push up labour costs. It's hard to see the reforms providing any great thrust to business in the medium term. 

These reforms had been enacted nearly five years ago but they have been notified only now. They reduced 29 laws to 4 labour codes; slash the number of regulations that cover businesses. They make compliance easier for big firms.

The new codes cover all workers instead of specified industries in the earlier version. This will mean compliance or more compliance for a whole range of firms, especially small and medium firms. Large firms already comply with many of the norms, so will not feel the pinch as much.

Industry's main demand was ease of firing. The new code raises the threshold were permission for layoffs is not required from 100 workers to 300 workers. This is not going to induce investment into labour-intensive sectors such as textiles, leather, auto compoents etc. along the lines of Soutth-East Asia. Moreover, most states already have the higher threshold, so the higher threshold will not much of a difference on the ground.

The new laws cover gig workers. They will specify minimum wages across four categories of workers under six different working conditions. All workers will be covered by welfare benefits such as Provident Fund, insurance, sick leave, mandatory health check-ups for workers over 40, etc. This will tend to push up labour costs.  It will hugely impact businesses such as Uber, Ola, Amazon, Flipkart etc. 

It's hard to see businesses complying with the requirement of benefits to workers. They will outsource jobs from firms that do not comply - and that means more income for government officials who monitor compliance.

Overall, there are benefits for companies as well as workers with the new codes tilting more towards the latter.