Will there be a recession in 2025? Forecasters are split - see reasons why.

With President Donald Trump imposing the largest tariffs on U.S. imports in a century – raising the prospect of sharply higher consumer prices and hammering the stock market – it may feel like the nation is already mired in recession.

Except on days when Trump metes out glimmers of hope. He has announced a 90-day pause on most of his reciprocal tariffs, exempted many Canadian and Mexican shipments from 25% duties and hinted that administration officials are making progress in tariff talks with China (a claim China has denied).

The whipsawing developments beg a pivotal question during a tumultuous time: Is the country headed for a recession in 2025 or not?

Shoppers walk through the Manhattan Mall in New York. Consumer spending has held up so far despite concerns about tariffs.
Shoppers walk through the Manhattan Mall in New York. Consumer spending has held up so far despite concerns about tariffs.

Is the 2025 recession coming?

Forecasters are roughly split, with nearly 4 in 10 figuring more than 50% odds of a downturn, according to a recent survey by the National Association of Business Economics.

Yet when the economy’s course can shift on a presidential whim, experts are finding measures they’ve traditionally used to make such predictions – such as retail sales and job growth – may no longer be reliable.

In response, some economists are turning to more recent, real-time gauges of consumer and business behavior, preferring to rely on what Americans do rather than what they say to chart the economy’s trajectory. The numbers paint a generally positive outlook that, according to these forecasters, should allow the nation to narrowly dodge a slump.

Others say such data is less meaningful because it will take a few months for tariffs to filter through to consumer prices. They believe that what Americans say and how they feel about what’s coming is a more accurate barometer of the turmoil that lies ahead.

What is the state of the US economy?

Last month, employers added a robust 228,000 jobs and retail sales rose a hefty 1.4%, more than expected - two readings that typically would reflect an economy in little danger of running aground.

But tariff developments are moving so swiftly that such indicators effectively amount to old news. In March, Trump boosted the tariff on China to 20% and slapped a 25% duty on steel and aluminum shipments.

In April, he unveiled a minimum 10% fee on all imports and double-digit charges on dozens of countries before announcing a 90-day pause on the higher levies for nations other than China. Yet a hike in China’s tariff to 145% more than offsets the economic benefits of the pause. A 25% tariff on imported vehicles also took effect in April.

Another wrinkle: Economists acknowledge the glowing retail sales figure was likely inflated by consumers “frontloading” purchases – buying cars and other goods before tariffs take effect, a strategy that should lead to weaker sales in coming months.