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Rams ace Nacua apologizes over 'antisemitic' gesture furor
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McIlroy wins BBC sports personality award for 2025 heroics
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Napoli beat Milan in Italian Super Cup semi-final
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Violence erupts in Bangladesh after wounded youth leader dies
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EU-Mercosur deal delayed as farmers stage Brussels show of force
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US hosting new Gaza talks to push next phase of deal
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Chicago Bears mulling Indiana home over public funding standoff
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Trump renames Kennedy arts center after himself
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Trump rebrands housing supplement as $1,776 bonuses for US troops
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Harrison Ford to get lifetime acting award
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Trump health chief seeks to bar trans youth from gender-affirming care
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Argentine unions in the street over Milei labor reforms
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Trump signs order reclassifying marijuana as less dangerous
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Famed Kennedy arts center to be renamed 'Trump-Kennedy Center'
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US accuses S.Africa of harassing US officials working with Afrikaners
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Brazil open to EU-Mercosur deal delay as farmers protest in Brussels
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Wounded Bangladesh youth leader dies in Singapore hospital
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New photo dump fuels Capitol Hill push on Epstein files release
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Brazil, Mexico seek to defuse US-Venezuela crisis
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Assange files complaint against Nobel Foundation over Machado win
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Private donors pledge $1 bn for CERN particle accelerator
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Russian court orders Austrian bank Raiffeisen to pay compensation
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US, Qatar, Turkey, Egypt to hold Gaza talks in Miami
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Lula open to mediate between US, Venezuela to 'avoid armed conflict'
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Brussels farmer protest turns ugly as EU-Mercosur deal teeters
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US imposes sanctions on two more ICC judges for Israel probe
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US accuses S. Africa of harassing US officials working with Afrikaners
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ECB holds rates as Lagarde stresses heightened uncertainty
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Trump Media announces merger with fusion power company
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Stocks rise as US inflation cools, tech stocks bounce
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Zelensky presses EU to tap Russian assets at crunch summit
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Pope replaces New York's Cardinal Dolan with pro-migrant bishop
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Odermatt takes foggy downhill for 50th World Cup win
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France exonerates women convicted over abortions before legalisation
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UK teachers to tackle misogyny in classroom
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Historic Afghan cinema torn down for a mall
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US consumer inflation cools unexpectedly in November
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Danish 'ghetto' residents upbeat after EU court ruling
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ECB holds rates but debate swirls over future
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Pope replaces New York's Cardinal Timothy Dolan with little-known bishop
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Bank of England cuts interest rate after UK inflation slides
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Have Iran's authorities given up on the mandatory hijab?
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Spain to buy 100 military helicopters from Airbus
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US strike on alleged drug boat in Pacific kills four
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Thailand strikes building in Cambodia's border casino hub
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Protests in Bangladesh as India cites security concerns
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European stocks rise before central bank decisions on rates
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Tractors clog Brussels in anger at EU-Mercosur trade deal
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Not enough evidence against Swedish PM murder suspect: prosecutor
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Nepal's ousted PM Oli re-elected as party leader
US growth figure expected to make for tough reading for Trump
US GDP figures for the first quarter are expected to show a sharp drop-off in growth -- and possibly even a recession -- reflecting a surge in imports before President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs came into effect.
"It's going to be a pretty dramatic slowdown from the fourth quarter," Moody's Analytics economist Matt Colyar told AFP.
The gross domestic product data for the quarter will be published on Wednesday, the 101st day since Trump's return to office on January 20.
In that time, he has announced several rounds of tariffs, laying out plans in March to impose sweeping levies on top trading partners from early April in a bid to reset US trade relations.
The introduction of those tariffs sparked a selloff in financial markets, sending volatility surging to levels not seen since the Covid-19 pandemic and spooking investors.
"Usually, government policy doesn't change that much, particularly not in the first 100 days of a presidency," George Washington University economics professor Tara Sinclair told AFP. "But this one's different."
"I think it's pretty clear that there were dramatic policy changes that are directly weakening the economy," she said.
Following April's dramatic market movement, the Trump administration announced a 90-day pause to the higher tariffs for dozens of countries to allow for trade talks, while maintaining a baseline 10 percent rate for most countries, sector-specific measures, and new sweeping tariffs totalling 145 percent on China.
- Rising recession risk -
The US economy grew 2.8 percent last year, according to the Commerce Department. Heading into the new year, analysts had widely expected growth to cool, but to remain at around two percent in 2025.
Since Trump's return to office, and the introduction of new tariffs, many analysts have sharply cut their growth outlook. Some economists -- including those at Wall Street titans Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley -- now predict an economic contraction in the first quarter.
But even if the economy does not contract for the first quarter -- which ended before Trump's sweeping tariffs came into effect -- the scale of the slowdown analysts expect would nevertheless be significant.
"Our expectation is kind of shockingly on the higher side, and we're at 0.5 percent," said Colyar from Moody's Analytics.
The market consensus estimate is for annualized GDP growth of 0.4 percent for the first quarter, according to Briefing.com -- a marked change from the 2.4 percent annualized rate seen in the final quarter of 2024.
If the economy cools as expected, it will be largely down to a surge in imports, as consumers and businesses scrambled to buy what they needed before the tariffs kicked in, analysts told AFP.
"This spike in imports, that's coming directly from people trying to get ahead of tariffs," said Sinclair from George Washington University. "And that is in direct response to the policies of this president."
Beyond the effects of tariffs, the GDP data is likely to paint a "very complicated story," Belinda Roman, associate professor of economics at St Mary's University in San Antonio, Texas, said in an interview.
Roman pointed to better-than-expected employment figures, which suggest that "clearly there's something else changing that we're not seeing just yet" in the data.
"I think there might be a small contraction," she said.
"That may be offset by the fact that we've seen what I think is a very interesting increase in employment," she said.
"I think we'll start to see in second quarter and third quarter more negative impacts, because it's it takes it a while," she said. "It doesn't happen immediately."
T.Bondarenko--BTB