The true cost of the recent global trade wars has been temporarily hidden, but a “great unmasking” is coming, according to a new report from a top financial institution. While the world economy’s “unexpected resilience” has led to a 2_025_ growth upgrade to 3.2%, the report warns this masks the real damage, leading to a “dim” long-term outlook.
The analysis claims that the immediate economic data was distorted by a simple behavioral change: households and companies “bringing forward consumption” to beat the introduction of tariffs. This created a temporary and misleading picture of economic health.
The report predicts that this mask will soon slip. As the effects of this pre-emptive buying fade, the underlying weakness in business investment will be revealed. The institution uses the UK’s post-Brexit experience—where investment started to “fall steadily” only after a delay—as a model for what the world can expect.
The UK’s own forecast reflects this coming challenge. A minor growth upgrade to 1.3% for this year is the “masked” view. The unmasked reality is a projection for the G7’s highest and most persistent inflation rate, a sign of fundamental economic problems.
Beyond trade, the report warns of other masked risks that will soon be revealed, including the full economic drag from restrictive immigration policies and the potential instability of “stretched” financial markets. The message is clear: the global economy’s true test is not behind it, but directly ahead.
