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U.S. Economy Shrank in First Quarter as Imports Surged Ahead of Tariffs

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The U.S. economy contracted in the first three months of 2025, as businesses rushed to stock up on imports ahead of the Trump administration’s tariffs and consumer spending slowed.

The Commerce Department said U.S. gross domestic product—the value of all goods and services produced across the economy—fell at a seasonally and inflation adjusted 0.3% annual rate in the first quarter. That was the first contraction since the first quarter of 2022.

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Consumer spending, the economy’s main engine, rose at a 1.8% pace in the first quarter, the smallest increase since mid-2023. Spending by the federal government fell as the Department of Government Efficiency cut jobs and contracts.

But the main driver of the first-quarter contraction was Trump’s trade war. Net exports, the difference between what the U.S. imports and exports, subtracted nearly 5 percentage points from headline GDP. That was the biggest quarterly drag from net exports on record dating back to 1947.

Businesses rushed to get ahead of tariffs that began to come into effect during the first three months of the year and were dramatically increased in the current, second quarter. Imports rose at the fastest pace since the third quarter of 2020, when the economy was reopening from pandemic lockdowns.

Imports subtract from the Commerce Department’s calculation of GDP, since they represent spending on foreign-made goods and services.

“The headline decline overstates weakness because a lot of that was tariff-induced pull-forward,” said Shannon Grein, an economist at Wells Fargo. “Overall, I think that it was a relatively solid underlying report when it comes to demand.”

Final sales to private domestic purchases, which tracks demand from businesses and consumers but not the more volatile government, inventory and international trade data, rose at a 3% rate in the first quarter, up from 2.9% the prior quarter. In another plus, businesses invested more in equipment and stocked inventories.

Still, the report is backward-looking, and turmoil from on-off tariff announcements and financial-market volatility has continued in the current quarter. Stocks fell Wednesday. The GDP reading fell short of the 0.4% growth that economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal expected.