Gita Gopinath, Harvard prof and former Deputy MD of IMF, thinks it will.
She gives her reasoning:
So why hasn’t the world felt the sting of tariffs yet? The answer lies partly in actual tariffs being around half of what the US announced thanks to numerous exemptions. Yet at 14 per cent this remains a sharp escalation, the consequences of which had two offsets. First, AI spending and the stock market surge powered by AI optimism have propped up US growth and buoyed economies like Taiwan and South Korea that export AI-related goods. Second, fiscal policy has been more expansionary, not only in the US, but even more so in Germany and China. These forces masked the drag from American tariffs and Chinese retaliation. They also made 2025 look far more stable than it actually was.
These favourable factors will not operate in 2026, she says. The AI boom is not sustainable. Importers cannot absorb 95 per cent of the higher costs, as they did in 2025. China cannot continue with its export-led strategy. The EU needs deep reforms that aren't happening.
Well, we'll see. Current inflation forecasts do not show a marked increase in inflation in the US for 2026. Stock market valuations for AI companies may get corrected but investment in AI is proceeding apace, particularly on the part of tech companies with large hoards of cash. China has diversified its exports away from the US and is growing exports to low-income countries at a much higher rate than before.
The thing is that many economists and commentators don't like the Trump administration. They want it to fail with its economic policy reset which includes protectionism, Buy American, Hire American etc. They disapprove of the massive fiscal deficit implied by Trump's Big Beautiful Bill for taxes passed last year.
It's not just that the real economy was not impacted as badly as experts had forecast- Gopinath's explanations may hold for the real economy. But what about financial markets which are said to be forward looking? They should be factoring in the implications for next year and the years ahead?
The aren't. Neither the US stock market nor the US bond market reacted anywhere as harshly as the commentators had forecast in 2025. Okay, stock market valuations may be influenced by AI stocks. But why have bond market yields hardly budged?
2026 could be the year of reckoning for the experts and not President Trump!
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