US economy grows faster than expected as Trump announces 25% tariffs on India – business live | Business

US economy grows at 3% annually, faster than expected

The US economy grew faster than expected in the second quarter of 2025, according to data which make even more distant the prospect of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut any time soon.

US GDP grew at a 3% annualised rate, according to the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Economists polled by Reuters had predicted annualised GDP growth of 2.4%, after a surprise contraction of 0.5% in the first quarter as exporters rushed to get their products into the country ahead of tariffs. Imports count against a country’s GDP.

Share

Key events

The US economy is still growing under Donald Trump’s presidency, but at a slower rate than last year under Joe Biden. Atakan Bakiskan, US economist at Berenberg, an investment bank, said:

Since the start of the year, US economic activity has expanded by 1.2% annualised, much slower than last year’s odds-defying first-half performance of 2.3% annualised. This softer growth path will likely persist – courtesy of slower immigration, trade wars and an uncertain macro environment.

But for future interest rate decisions the Federal Reserve is likely to deprioritise the GDP figures in favour of the jobs data due to be released on Friday. Bakiskan again:

Given the lag and the noisy signal it sends, GDP will remain in the backseat. The Fed will stay focused on what sits in the front seat – the holy grail nonfarm payroll data – to assess the health of the US economy. That has so far proved resilient so far and should remain so on Friday. With only a few hours left until the Fed decision, which is all but guaranteed to be a hold, today’s GDP report will not change the narrative of a slowing but not stalled US economy.

Share

Leave a Comment