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Sign In or Create an Account When U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled his barrage of tariffs in the Rose Garden on April 2 leaders around the world feared they were watching the death blow to globalization.
“‘Liberation Day’ was not liberating, but seems to have marked the end of global free trade,” Isabel Schnabel, a member of the European Central Bank executive board, told a gathering of business leaders in Italy a few days later. On that day in April, the United States imposed a 10 per cent base tax on most products coming into the country along with steep reciprocal tariffs in response to trade barriers faced by U.S.
exporters abroad. The former came into effect April 5, while the latter was later postponed for 90 days after a very negative reaction from stock and bond markets. Breaking business news, incisive views, must-reads and market signals.
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We encountered an issue signing you up. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Even if restrictions are rolled back “the reality is that the age of free trade is unlikely to come back,” said Eswar Prasad, a Cornell University professor writing for Foreign Affairs magazine after April 2.
“Instead, any haggling between Trump and other states will share an emerging economic system defined by protectionism, tensions and transactions.” This resurgence of protectionism could also exacerbate existing vulnerabilities within the global economy, economists warn. “The rise of protectionism threatens to bring other underlying problems in the global economy to the surface,” said Jocelyn Paquet, National Bank economist.
The less open international trading system is likely to weigh on growth everywhere, said Paquet. Many countries, still recovering from the impact of the global pandemic, are already carrying higher deficits and public finances are bound to deteriorate further as growth slows. Government revenues will fall, while countries are forced to spend more supporting businesses and citizens.
“Higher deficits will lead to increased debt issuance, which could prove problematic in the current environment,” said Paquet. The amount of sovereign bonds issued by rich countries hit a historic high in 2024, and any increase in the supply is likely to lead to higher interest rates, she said. Central banks have reduced their purchases of these bonds and are unlikely to pick up the pace if tariffs keep inflation above their targets , even if an economy is struggling.
Foreign buyers of sovereign debt could also become more cautious, said Paquet. Buyers tend to “recycle” their export earnings in foreign currencies into foreign debt. If tariffs reduce these exports, it could cut demand for bonds.
That leaves financial institutions and households to pick up the slack. While they may be willing to do this, National expects they will demand higher interest rates if they believe protectionism will keep inflation above central bank targets. It’s a resurgence in inflation that is the biggest risk to the global economy, they said.
Not only will it reduce consumers’ purchasing power, it will limit the ability of central banks to cut interest rates. Amid this “much more protectionist environment than we had originally anticipated,” National Bank economists have cut their forecast for global growth to 2.8 per cent in 2025, and 2.
7 per cent in 2026 — though they stand ready to revise it. Sign up here to get Posthaste delivered straight to your inbox. Canadians have been getting relief at the pumps recently, what with the removal of the carbon tax and slumping oil prices.
Gas prices are on track to fall more than 10 per cent in April from the month before, unless there is a turnaround in global oil prices, said Douglas Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets. Typically gas prices rise in April. Last year at this time they were up nearly 8 per cent, so the recent decline means they are down 20 per cent from a year ago, said Porter.
Since gas prices make up about 4 per cent of the consumer price index basket, the drop have an impact on overall inflation. Though retaliatory tariffs will lift some prices, Porter predicts Canada’s inflation rate could drop below 2 per cent next month. Pension splitting can be a great idea for qualifying couples because it reduces household taxes paid and may even reduce or eliminate OAS clawback, but not everybody benefits in the same way.
Financial planner Allan Norman walks a retired couple making about $70,000 a year through the numbers to see if the savings are enough to justify their time and expense. Read more in FP Answers. McLister on mortgages Want to learn more about mortgages? Mortgage strategist Robert McLister’s Financial Post column can help navigate the complex sector, from the latest trends to financing opportunities you won’t want to miss.
Plus check his mortgage rate page for Canada’s lowest national mortgage rates, updated daily. Financial Post on YouTube Visit the Financial Post’s YouTube channel for interviews with Canada’s leading experts in business, economics, housing, the energy sector and more. Today’s Posthaste was written by Pamela Heaven with additional reporting from Financial Post staff, The Canadian Press and Bloomberg.
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Posthaste: Trump’s tariff war threatens to expose cracks in the global economy

Expect inflation, interest rates and deficits to rise, say economists