If you had followed the economic forecasts at the start of 2025, you’d have been tempted to hide under the stairs with a blanket and a survival kit. The narrative was clear: the return of Donald Trump and his aggressive tariff regime would signal the end of the global economy as we knew it.
Experts predicted the largest trade shock in history, with some warning that a global recession was almost a mathematical certainty.

Yet, as we reach the end of the year, the wreckage is surprisingly hard to find. The world is still turning. While growth has slowed, the much feared recession hasn’t materialized. Global trade has undergone massive shifts behind the scenes, but it has neither halted nor collapsed. This raises a fundamental question: are our economic models broken, or has the global trading system proven far more resilient than anyone dared to hope?
Uncertainty as a Tool
One reason the dire predictions missed the mark is that they took initial announcements at face value. It has since become clear that the “April shock” of sky-high tariff announcements was a deliberate strategy of injecting uncertainty into the market to gain leverage. The goal was always to start high and negotiate down.
While journalists and analysts were asking what the direct impact of a 27% tariff would be, the reality on the ground was a moving target. By November, after rounds of intense negotiations, the effective average tariff had dropped to 17%. While this is still significantly higher than the pre-2025 average of 2.5%, it is a far cry from the “total trade war” originally envisioned. Most major economic blocs managed to negotiate their way down, leaving China as the only player facing extreme rates above 40%.
Restraint and Resilience
The second reason we avoided a total meltdown was a surprising display of global self-discipline. The catastrophic scenarios relied on a domino effect of retaliatory tariffs. However, most of the world chose not to strike back in kind. Because the primary burden of a tariff falls on the country imposing it (as a tax on its own importers), the rest of the world avoided much of the pain by simply refusing to escalate. It was a calculated choice of restraint over ego.
Furthermore, global trade proved to be remarkably agile. We often think of international commerce as a slow-moving tanker, but this year showed it can pivot like a speedboat. When routes to the U.S. became too expensive, fleets redirected, and trade intensified within other regions. While exports from Europe to the U.S. have dipped, they haven’t cratered. Meanwhile, global trade in goods actually rose by over 6% this year. The old adage that “when America sneezes, the world catches a cold” no longer seems to hold true; we are moving toward a more balanced, less U.S. centric global economy.
The Hidden Toll
Does this mean the tariffs were a victimless policy? Far from it. While the “doomsday” didn’t happen, a slow erosion is visible beneath the surface.
The pain is currently being masked by corporate buffers. To avoid losing market share, exporters are slightly lowering their prices, while U.S. importers are eating into their own profit margins or cutting costs elsewhere rather than passing the full cost to the consumer immediately. Additionally, many companies stockpiled goods before the tariffs took effect, allowing them to sell older, cheaper inventory throughout the year.
However, these buffers are not infinite. Inflation in the U.S., which had been trending downward before the inauguration, has begun to creep back up. The promised manufacturing boom has yet to materialize, and job growth has stalled. Perhaps most tellingly, the tariff revenue is nowhere near enough to replace income tax, as was once claimed.
The real test will come in the next six months. As stockpiles empty and profit margins hit rock bottom, businesses will be forced to pass costs onto the public. This won’t just affect imported goods, but will trickle down into services like healthcare and hospitality. The economic “hell and damnation” didn’t arrive with a bang in early 2025, but for the American consumer, it may yet arrive with a whimper just in time for the midterm elections.


Hi Roel, I love that you can always explain things so simply and clearly! Keep up the good work and Merry Christmas! Anne
Always a pleasure Anne. Merry Christmas to you too!
This really hits the nail on the head. It is fucking well written.