The Guardian view on the IMF’s warning: Donald Trump could cost the world a trillion dollars | Editorial

You May Be Interested In:Trump suddenly needs Congress – and his ‘big, beautiful bill’ is on the rocks


Wake up! When the most sober of global institutions, the International Monetary Fund, abandons its usual technocratic calm to sound the alarm on the political roots of global financial instability, it’s time to pay attention. The IMF is warning of a non-negligible risk of a $1tn hit to global output, as Donald Trump’s erratic “America first” agenda – part oligarchic enrichment scheme, part mobster shakedown – collides with a perfect storm of global financial vulnerabilities.

Such a shock would be equivalent to a third of that experienced in the 2008 crisis. But it would be felt in a much more fragile and politically charged environment. This time, the crisis stems not just from markets but from the politics at the heart of the dollar system. The IMF’s latest Global Financial Stability Report sees the danger in Mr Trump’s trade policies, especially his “liberation day” announcements, which have pushed up America’s effective tariff rate to the highest in over 100 years.

The IMF put investors on notice that Trumpian volatility was taking place as US debt and equities – especially tech stocks – were overvalued. It cautions that hedge funds have made huge bets that have gone sour, requiring them to sell US treasuries for cash and potentially deepening the chaos in bond markets. Ominously, the IMF draws the comparison, first made by the analyst Nathan Tankus, with the “dash for cash” in March 2020 during Covid, when the Federal Reserve rescued US treasury markets directly. Developing nations, already grappling with the highest real borrowing costs in a decade, may now be forced to take on even more expensive debt – the IMF warns – just to cushion the blow from Mr Trump’s new tariffs, risking a dreaded “sudden stop” in capital flows.

At the heart of this chaos stands the US, the very country meant to uphold the global financial architecture. Just over a week ago, Adam Tooze of Columbia University wondered if markets had begun to “sell America” after US long-maturity bond prices fell precipitously. He thought that markets were no longer just responding to economic fundamentals but to politics as a systemic risk factor. In this case: Mr Trump’s tariff threats and his increasing political pressure on Fed’s chair, Jerome Powell. In essence, Prof Tooze gave us the theory; the IMF just confirmed the data.

The US president’s continued attacks on the Fed chair over the weekend have only added to a flight from US equities, bonds and the dollar itself. The money is fleeing to safe havens such as gold. Some of the loss has been clawed back, but at what cost? Investors aren’t just jittery about inflation or growth – they’re hedging against political chaos. That might explain the seemingly divergent IMF messaging: blunt systemic warnings in its report versus the soothing market-facing comments from a senior official at the fund’s press conference. This is central bank diplomacy. The institution is signalling that it is worried while trying not to spark a self-fulfilling panic in treasuries and the dollar.

The real concern here is not technical dysfunction in treasury markets or the mechanics of the Fed, which are the bedrock of the global financial system. It’s about the politicisation of the monetary-fiscal nexus under a Trumpian regime that is fundamentally hostile to the norms of liberal-democratic governance. When even the dollar is no longer a safe haven, what – or who – can be?

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

AUSTIN, TEXAS - APRIL 19: Comedian Roy Wood Jr. performs on stage during Moontower Comedy Festival at The Paramount Theatre on April 19, 2024 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Rick Kern/Getty Images)
Roy Wood Jr. on his Hulu Special and the State of Political Comedy
Oleksandr Usyk vs. Tyson Fury 2 Pay-Per-View: Here’s How to Watch the Grand Arrivals Boxing Livestream Online
Oleksandr Usyk vs. Tyson Fury 2 Pay-Per-View: Here’s How to Watch the Grand Arrivals Boxing Livestream Online
Brenton Wood, Singer Behind 'The Oogum Boogum Song,' Dead at 83
Brenton Wood, Singer Behind ‘The Oogum Boogum Song,’ Dead at 83
Stylist Sam Spector on Creating Alan Cumming’s Extravagant Looks for ‘The Traitors’
Stylist Sam Spector on Creating Alan Cumming’s Extravagant Looks for ‘The Traitors’
‘Miss Austen’ Trailer Stars Keeley Hawes as Jane Austen’s Sister Cassandra in the BBC, PBS Drama
‘Miss Austen’ Trailer Stars Keeley Hawes as Jane Austen’s Sister Cassandra in the BBC, PBS Drama
Netflix Supports Brazilian Cinematheque Restoration with $875,000 Cash Donation
Netflix Supports Brazilian Cinematheque Restoration with $875,000 Cash Donation
Global Pulse News | © 2025 | News