NextFin news, On Saturday, October 11, 2025, concerns intensified over the global economic impact of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff policies announced on April 2, 2025, which impose varying import tariffs on multiple countries. These tariffs have disrupted global production chains and created uncertainty for international trade, particularly affecting the Global South.
The tariffs aim to address U.S. trade and current account imbalances, penalize countries perceived to discriminate against U.S. firms, encourage reshoring of manufacturing, generate revenue to offset fiscal deficits caused by tax cuts, and pursue political objectives such as enforcing sanctions on Russia or influencing legal actions involving allies like former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.
However, the broad and inconsistent objectives of these tariffs have increased the risk of a global protectionist wave, as countries like Mexico have announced intentions to raise duties on imports from nations without trade treaties, and China has warned of retaliatory measures. This escalation threatens to worsen trade and current account deficits worldwide, undermining macroeconomic stability.
Experts warn that if tariffs fail to sufficiently reduce imports to offset declines in U.S. exports, countries may resort to quantitative import restrictions. The World Trade Organization, weakened by U.S. influence, is unlikely to effectively counter these trends.
The legacy of the Bretton Woods system, established post-World War II to stabilize exchange rates and support development through the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, is under strain. The system originally aimed to recycle surpluses from developed countries to deficit countries to reduce global inequality. However, financial deregulation since the 1970s and the shift to floating exchange rates have eroded the IMF's traditional role.
Trump's 'Make America Great Again' agenda restricts exports from developing countries and discourages U.S. investment abroad, while leaving financial capital flows largely unrestricted. This dynamic risks widening current account deficits in less developed countries, which may finance these deficits through increased external borrowing, potentially triggering debt crises and IMF-imposed austerity measures.
The IMF faces a legitimacy crisis as the U.S., which controls its governance, pursues policies contradicting the Fund's neoliberal prescriptions of free trade, fiscal prudence, and central bank independence. The U.S. government's large deficits and trade restrictions undermine the Fund's credibility and its ability to enforce adjustment programs.
Consequently, the Global South confronts a challenging macroeconomic environment marked by debt accumulation, reduced export earnings, and diminished access to private financial flows. The Trump administration's tariff policies have thus deepened existing structural vulnerabilities in the international economic system.
This analysis was originally published by the Bretton Woods Project on October 8, 2025, and republished by Monthly Review Online on October 11, 2025.
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