Opinion | At the rate Trump’s going, a global recession will be hard to sidestep
The fracturing of global trade, coupled with the US president’s attacks on the Federal Reserve, doesn’t bode well for the world

Nearly five years ago, I warned that stagflation was only a broken supply chain away. A temporary outbreak did indeed occur in the immediate aftermath of the Covid-19 shock, as a surge in inflation coincided with an anaemic recovery in global demand.
But, like the pandemic, that economic disruption quickly subsided. Today, a more worrisome form of stagflation is in the offing, threatening severe and lasting consequences for the global economy and world financial markets.
These actions will reverse the supply-chain efficiencies that academic research suggests have reduced the US inflation rate by at least 0.5 percentage points per year over the past decade. This reversal, driven by America’s new-found disdain for its former trading partners, is likely to be permanent. Whereas the Covid-19 turmoil had a clear end point, distrust of the US will persist long after Trump has left the scene. This time, there will be no quick or easy fix.