The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta forecast a sharp decline of 2.7% for US GDP in the first quarter of 2025. That would mark the worst quarter since the Covid era in mid-2020. - Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta forecast a sharp decline of 2.7% for US GDP in the first quarter of 2025. That would mark the worst quarter since the Covid era in mid-2020. – Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

President Donald Trump’s major, abrupt policy shifts likely slowed the US economy sharply in the beginning of the year — for the worst quarter perhaps since the Covid-19 pandemic — as consumers and businesses fretted about massive new tariffs.

The Commerce Department is set to release its initial estimate of first-quarter gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic output, on Wednesday at 8:30 am ET. It will give the clearest picture yet of how the US economy is responding to Trump’s sweeping economic agenda, just one day after the administration’s 100th day in power.

Economists estimate that GDP expanded at an annualized rate of 0.8% in the first quarter, adjusting for inflation and seasonal swings, according to financial data firm FactSet, which would be the weakest rate since the second quarter of 2022. The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, meanwhile, is forecasting a sharp decline of 2.7%, which would mark the worst quarter since mid-2020.

GDP likely slowed due to higher imports as American consumers and businesses rushed to beat Trump’s tariffs (when imports exceed exports, that subtracts from GDP); weaker spending early in the quarter as unusually harsh cold weather kept shoppers hunkered down; and companies pausing investments over uncertainty stemming from Trump’s policies, among other factors.

“There’s a lot of noise in the data from storms, people front-loading and some payback for the strength in the fourth quarter,” Nathan Sheets, global chief economists at Citigroup, told CNN. “But you’ve got this economic concern from how tariffs are going to affect the economy and markets that people are really struggling with.”

The Trump administration has been on a chaotic tariff spree over the past couple of months to address a massive trade deficit that Trump has referred to as a “national emergency” — and that deficit has actually become worse in recent months.

So far, Trump has levied 25% tariffs on aluminum and steel; 25% tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada that aren’t compliant with a free-trade agreement among the countries; a staggering 145% duty on Chinese imports; a 25% tariff on cars, with separate tariffs on auto parts coming at a later date; and a 10% baseline tariffs on all US imports.

A massive tariff hike on dozens of countries briefly went into effect on April 9, though Trump swiftly delayed that hike that same day until July. He also introduced temporary exemptions for some electronic goods, and he has said separate tariffs are likely coming down the pike on semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, copper and timber.