Asia is bearing the brunt of new US tariffs which will drag on regional growth through weaker business investment and sentiment, requiring central banks to step in with more interest-rate cuts, economists reckon.
“The impact on ASEAN is more pronounced this time,” said Selena Ling, head of research at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. “Given a narrower tariff gap between China and previous popular destinations such as Vietnam and Thailand, China’s prior strategy of routing exports through ASEAN may now be less effective. As a result, the trade dynamic may shift again.”
The Trump administration’s tariffs come at a time when Asian economies are already grappling with tepid growth, with sticky inflation keeping some central banks on high alert. While Australia and New Zealand are among countries that got off relatively lightly with a 10% levy, as small, open economies they are particularly reliant on global trade to underpin prosperity.
Money markets are now pricing four more rate cuts this year by Australia’s central bank, up from three previously, which would take its cash rate to 3.1%.

Economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. have cut growth forecasts for Asia and predict an easier monetary policy stance in India, South Korea and several Southeast Asian economies including Indonesia and Malaysia.
There will be a “hard-hitting impact” on economic growth for the region, OCBC’s Ling said, singling out Vietnam as the country set to see the biggest impact, followed by Thailand. She anticipates Indonesia and India will be “more insulated” and the Philippines the least impacted. Ling also revised her central bank forecasts, adding 50-basis points of cuts each for the five countries.

New Zealand’s central bank is expected to deliver a quarter-point cut on Wednesday, taking its official cash rate to 3.5%. Economists at Westpac Banking Corp. say the US tariffs are a reason for policymakers in Wellington to retain an easing bias.
“We don’t think this means they will step up to a 50 basis-point cut — the 25 basis point cut will likely remain the preferred option,” Westpac said. “Global developments will continue to be a key risk factor, and uncertainty, that will drive their actions over the balance of the year.”
On the same day as New Zealand’s policy decision, India’s central bank is also predicted to cut its repurchase rate. On Thursday, Philippine monetary authorities will likely seize on February’s softer inflation reading to resume their easing cycle.
One country where the scope for rate cuts could increase is Thailand, given headline CPI is forecast to slip into negative territory in the second quarter, according to ING Groep NV.
Morgan Stanley’s Chief Asia Economist Chetan Ahya sees the potential for 50-100 basis points of additional rate cuts in Asia relative to his current base case, though he worries about the capacity for fiscal policy to buttress monetary easing.
“The magnitude of easing in Asia may be more moderate in this cycle given more limited fiscal space this time around on account of higher public debt to GDP ratios,” Ahya said. “We therefore expect more monetary easing than fiscal easing to come.”
. Read more on Global Economics by NDTV Profit.The Trump administration’s tariffs come at a time when Asian economies are already grappling with tepid growth, with sticky inflation keeping some central banks on high alert. Read MoreGlobal Economics, World, Bloomberg
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