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Donald Trump has declined to rule out either a recession or higher inflation while dismissing the concerns of business over a lack of clarity on tariffs, after a tumultuous week in which he watered down elements of his aggressive trade agenda.ย
The president insisted industry had โplenty of clarityโ and lashed out at โsoundbite[s]โ from companies expressing confusion over his plans.ย
โThey always say that โ thatโs like almost a soundbite โ they always say that: โwe want clarityโ,โ Trump said in an interview aired on Fox News on Sunday.ย
โIt sounds good to say, but for years, the globalists, the big globalists, have been ripping off the United States. Theyโve been taking money away from the United States, and all weโre doing is getting some of it back.โ
The president declined to rule out a recession hitting the US economy this year after the Atlanta Fed warned of an economic contraction in the first quarter of the year.ย
โI hate to predict things like that. There is a period of transition, because what weโre doing is very big. Weโre bringing wealth back to America. Thatโs a big thing, and there are always periods, it takes a little time.โ
Asked whether tariffs could fuel inflation again, Trump said: โYou may get it. In the meantime, guess what? Interest rates are down.โ
The comments come after a week of about-turns and an equity market sell-off as markets scrambled for clarity over Trumpโs brewing trade war and companies warned of rising prices.
The president imposed 25 per cent tariffs across the board on imports from Canada and Mexico on Tuesday before backtracking later in the week.
On Wednesday he granted carmakers a carve-out from the levies and on Thursday extended that to all goods that met the rules of the 2020 USMCA free-trade deal. Separate 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium imports are set to take effect this week.
The levies have already caused significant upheaval in the market as companies stockpile materials, review operations and prepare to raise prices. Trump reiterated that the tariffs could rise in future.
โThe tariffs could go up as time goes by. They may go up, I donโt know if itโs predictability,โ he said.
Trump said in the interview that he had โwanted to help the American carmakersโ this week but insisted that no such leeway would be shown on reciprocal tariffs set to be imposed next month.ย
โI gave them a little bit of a break for a short period of timeโ.โ.โ. Itโs a transition into April, and after that Iโm not doing thisโ.โ.โ.โI told them, I said: Look, Iโm going to do it this one time but, after that, Iโm not doing it.โ
Separately on Sunday, Howard Lutnick, Trumpโs commerce secretary, conceded some of the tariffs would cause inflationary pressures, echoing Trumpโs warnings of โa little disturbanceโ when he addressed Congress on Tuesday.
โSo, will there be distortions? Of course, foreign goods may get a little more expensive, but American goods are going to get cheaper.,โ Lutnick told NBCโs meet the press.


