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PEZA, BCDA agree on regulatory arrangements for New Clark City

New Clark City

THE Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) and the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) have adopted an interim arrangement that will define their regulation of New Clark City.

“Under this setup, BCDA will register and regulate new developer or operator projects in New Clark City, while PEZA will oversee locator projects,” PEZA said in a Facebook post on Tuesday.

“This approach leverages BCDA’s expertise in property development and estate management alongside PEZA’s renowned one-stop shop services for locators,” it added.

PEZA Director General Tereso O. Panga said the arrangement will apply to projects in Clark Green City and will be implemented through a memorandum of agreement.

“This partnership between PEZA and BCDA not only prevents jurisdictional overlaps between the two investment promotion agencies but also capitalizes on our core competencies to attract more investors to the Philippines, particularly along the Luzon Economic Corridor,” Mr. Panga said.

Under the arrangement, BCDA will implement its overall estate planning strategy, with locators able to tap PEZA’s one-stop shop functions.

“Eventually, through our joint capacity building, we hope that BCDA will take on those same one-stop shop functions,” Mr. Panga said.

“We aim to capacitate BCDA so that in five years, they will be able to register and administer incentives according to PEZA’s model. This will also include PEZA being granted the authority to issue building permits within these zones,” he added.

PEZA also committed to assist BCDA in project registration and fiscal and non-fiscal incentive administration.

BCDA President and Chief Executive Officer Joshua M. Bingcang said that the tieup combines the two organizations’ “strengths in infrastructure development and public-private partnerships with investment facilitation.”

At the Money Talks with Cathy Yang program on One News Channel on Monday, Mr. Bingcang said two big contracts have been signed to fast-track the development of New Clark City.

“We started in January with the expansion of a 100-hectare industrial park with a Filipino-Japanese consortium. They are already in the south, and they are expanding in Clark,” he said.

“So this investment commitment is expected to generate tens of thousands of jobs. We are ready to turn over the property to them,” he added.

He added that an agreement for the first 3,000 housing units in New Clark City was also signed with South Korean partners, including the South Korean government. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Weak chicken farmgate prices offset supply concerns arising from US ban

REUTERS

THE farmgate price of chicken is declining, offsetting any potential upward pressure resulting from a temporary ban on poultry imports from several US states, industry groups said.

The United Broiler Raisers Association (UBRA) told BusinessWorld that the current farmgate prices of live weight regular sized chicken was P126-P129 per kilo, from P135 a week earlier.

The farmgate prices for day-old chickens, meanwhile, was between P52 and P54. 

“It does not follow when there is such a ban that there will be price increases,” UBRA President Elias Jose M. Inciong said via Viber.

Citing bird flu outbreaks, the Department of Agriculture (DA) temporarily banned imports of poultry products such as poultry meat, day-old chicks, eggs, and semen from Indiana, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin, South Dakota, Maryland, and Missouri.

The US accounts for 33% or 158,159 metric tons (MT) of the Philippines’ 472,211 MT chicken imports in 2024, making it the Philippines’ second-largest chicken supplier.

Meat Importers and Traders Association President Jesus C. Cham told BusinessWorld that chicken prices in the Philippines may still rise due to the temporary import ban. 

Philippine importers are still grappling with the delay in the allocation of the minimum access volume (MAV) quota on poultry imports, he said via Viber.

He described the current poultry supply situation as “tight.”

Meat traders have been calling on the DA to issue the MAV allocation for 2025 as soon as possible to avoid supply disruptions. MAV quotas should have been released in the first week of January, they said. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Japan leisure company studying PHL entry

PEXELS-PIXABAY

JAPAN’s Koshidaka Holdings Co., Ltd. is exploring entering the Philippines with entertainment centers and hot spring facilities, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said.

“This is a very big entertainment and leisure company in Japan that wants to do business here in the Philippines,” Trade Secretary Ma. Cristina A. Roque said in a briefing on Tuesday. 

“I have told them that I will introduce them to the presidents of the malls and also other areas where they can really expand, not just in Metro Manila but nationwide,” she added.

Koshidaka is among the 13 Japanese companies and business federations the DTI met with in Japan last week.

The meeting with Koshidaka yielded a P2.5-billion investment pledge.

“The company plans to open its first store in Metro Manila by the end of 2025, with plans to expand to 30 locations and eventually to 100,” the DTI said.

Koshidaka has 671 stores in Japan. It controls the Karaoke Manekineko, One Kara, and Maneki no Yu brands.

“They are also very much interested in really growing their other businesses. Aside from entertainment, they also want to open a gym that’s focused on women and Japanese onsen (hot springs baths),” Ms. Roque said.

“They are coming to explore locations where they can open,” she added.

Ms. Roque said that it will introduce Koshidaka to business officials where the Japanese company can expand.

“Our 115 million population is of interest to them as well as our love for karaoke,” she added.

During the Japan trip, Ms. Roque obtained P23.5 billion in investment pledges from Koshidaka, the Sumitomo group, Nidec, and Fujifilm.

Ms. Roque said that she also met with six companies during her US trip last week, including Starlink, which is currently working with local partners to expand in the Philippines.

“They’re still in talks now, and definitely it is for connectivity and what else we can generate from Starlink. But connectivity is really actually number one,” she said.

“I am not sure if they will really announce it in the first quarter, but they are aggressive. They are in serious talks,” she added.

Converge Information and Communications Technology Solutions, Inc. was identified as among Starlink’s five local partners.

“Due to the surging demand for additional capacity in the Philippines, Starlink Philippines intends to construct and operate satellite earth stations or ground stations (gateways) to address the demand,” the DTI said.

Starlink Philippines has initiated the process of obtaining a Congressional franchise, but bills are still pending.

Senate Resolution No. 3 and House Resolution No. 298 have been issued urging the National Telecommunications Commission to issue provisional authority to Starlink to allow the construction and operation of earth stations, the DTI said.

However, a notice of deficiency was issued to Starlink on Feb. 6, listing the required technical submissions before a temporary license can be issued.

“Starlink Philippines has yet to submit the required documents. The NTC met with Starlink Philippines on March 10 to discuss the required technical submissions,” the DTI said.

According to the DTI, Starlink is planning to put up earth stations in 14 locations.

Aside from Starlink, Ms. Roque also met with Birns & Sawyer, Boeing, Oliver Tolentino Atelier, Seafood City, Prime Videos, and Relativity Media. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

Guidelines on deepfakes being drafted

STOCK PHOTO | Image by stokpic from Pixabay

THE Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) through its Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) is drafting guidelines regulating deepfakes — artificially generated images, videos, or audio meant to deceive consumers of media.

“We are now working on some guidelines on the reporting mechanism for this. But the tools we have acquired are for distribution,” Undersecretary and CICC Executive Director Alexander K. Ramos told reporters on the sidelines of a cybersecurity conference on Tuesday.

Mr. Ramos said the government has established a national deepfake task force to help develop industry standards for content creation, distribution, and labeling of manipulated media like deepfakes.

This task force will comprise representatives from government agencies, technology companies, media organizations, educational institutions, and civil society.

Mr. Ramos said the government has procured software to aid the task force in detecting deepfakes.

“It allows real-time detection of deepfakes with 95% accuracy,” Mr. Ramos said.

The DICT has warned that it is expecting to see increased cyberattacks this year as threat actors are expected to take advantage of emerging technologies ahead of the 2025 midterm elections.

He said the policy on deepfakes could be issued within the month, with guidelines to be aligned with the Commission on Elections (Comelec) campaigning rules.

Comelec has “an En Banc resolution to address this content. We are aligning with that,” he said.

“Before the end of the month, it is fully operational. The whole monitoring system, the whole policy, would be in place. We are building right now the central database.”

Ronald B. Gustilo, a national campaigner for Digital Pinoys, welcomed the plan, saying his group has been advocating rules to address deepfakes.

“For the policy guidelines to be effective, the government should consider drafting a clear definition and legal framework to define deepfakes and their malicious use, distinguishing between harmless digital content and those intended for deception, fraud, or misinformation. This will help establish legal accountability,” Mr. Gustilo said via Viber. — Ashley Erika O. Jose

Lady Bulldogs eye first-round sweep against Lady Falcons

NATIONAL UNIVERSITY LADY BULLDOGS — UAAP/JEMILL FERRER

Games on Wednesday
(Mall of Asia Arena)
9 a.m. – NU vs Adamson (men)
11 a.m. – Ateneo vs La Salle (men)
1 p.m. – NU vs Adamson (women)
3 p.m. – Ateneo vs La Salle (women)

NATIONAL UNIVERSITY tries to zero in on a first-round sweep against Adamson University while Ateneo de Manila University and De La Salle University rekindle their rivalry in the UAAP Season 87 women’s volleyball on Wednesday at the Mall of Asia Arena.

Game time is at 1 p.m. featuring the NU Lady Bulldogs’ 6-0 bid opposite the AdU Lady Falcons (2-3) before the duel between the DLSU Lady Spikers (3-2) and the ADMU Blue Eagles (1-4) at 3 p.m. Also on deck are the men’s duels of NU-Adamson at 9 a.m. and Ateneo-La Salle at 11 a.m.

The Lady Spikers have won their 14 straight games over the rebuilding and crippled Blue Eagles in a lopsided rivalry since 2017, making them a heavy favorite once more in a mission to stay in the Top 4.

But the league belongs to NU, which has shored up its bid for a back-to-back title and third in the last four seasons with five straight wins to take the pole position with ease.

Against Adamson, there’s no stepping in the gas for reigning MVP Bella Belen who’ll be up against another Rookie-MVP contender Shaina Nitura, ahead of a highly-anticipated finals rematch with Angge Poyos and University of Santo Tomas this weekend.

Ms. Nitura, the juniors MVP who anchored Adamson to a 14-0 sweep for the school’s first girls’ volleyball title last year, smashed the UAAP rookie record with 33 points in her winning debut but Adamson since then has lost three of its last four games.

That was despite Ms. Nitura scoring double digits in every game.

“Volleyball is a team effort and there’s great capability of Adamson as a team. Don’t be too harsh on herself,” said Ms. Belen, pointing to the massive difference in high school and collegiate volleyball play, as Ms. Nitura enters a transition stage along with her young squad.

That team effort definitely will be the edge for NU, featuring an intact championship core also led by Finals MVP Alyssa Solomon and Vange Alinsug, against the youthful Adamson unit.

“Teamwork wins games. Knowing Adamson, they have a blue-chip player in Ms. Nitura so we will be ready for Adamson,” said NU mentor Sherwin Meneses, a former Adamson player and head coach. — John Bryan Ulanday

Sabrina Ionescu gets a taste of Pinoy basketball, shares college days with PVL’s Brooke Van Sickle

SABRINA IONESCO taking pictures with fans.

OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALIST and WNBA champion Sabrina Ionescu was in the country as part of her Nike Tour.

And amid the buzz of the spotlight, the New York Liberty star never forgot an old familiar face back from their college days at the University of Oregon — Premier Volleyball League (PVL) standout Brooke Van Sickle of Petro Gazz.

“We came in together at Oregon, so it’s been, you know, we were able to kind of go through that learning period together,” said Ms. Ionescu during Tuesday’s one of several media interviews she gave at The Peninsula Manila Hotel.

“She played volleyball, I played basketball but we shared the same arena and I think that’s something that kind of helped us grow,” she added.

Of course, Ms. Van Sickle was Ms. Ionescu’s former classmate and both played for the Ducks with the former for the volleyball team and the latter for the basketball squad.

She said Ms. Van Sickle’s journey from the US NCAA to the PVL is also something to be impressed about.

“Obviously, being able to see how she’s done in her career is really inspiring as well,” said Ms. Ionescu, who first visited here five years ago.

The country showered Ms. Ionescu with love and adoration after holding camps in Taguig and Bulacan and gamely posed for photos and signed autographs in his first few days in the country.

Ms. Ionescu said she had nothing but appreciation for the basketball-mad Filipino fans.

“It was surreal, really exciting to feel the energy. It’s vibrant, powerful and makes me want to be better, makes me want to continue doing things that I’ve been doing,” she said.

“Their support for me is an all-time high.” — Joey Villar

Tropang Giga to use treys to beat full-force Gin Kings

TNT is preparing to utilize a major weapon that gave it a big edge against Barangay Ginebra in its previous title run — long-distance shooting.

The Tropang Giga shot at a 39.6% marksmanship from the three-point arc (67-of-169) and averaged 11 per game, which, coupled with their trademark defense, lifted them past the Gin Kings in the finals of the season-opening PBA Governors’ Cup last November, 4-2.

As the two renew their rivalry and this time fight over the crown in the mid-season Commissioner’s Cup starting Friday, the troops of coach Chot Reyes hope their outside sniping clicks anew.

Stats from the Governors’ Cup championship series showed TNT outgunning Ginebra from afar in all six games, including Games 3 and 4 that it lost.

The Tropang Giga were 12-of-30 in their Game 1 victory, 14-of-37 in Game 2, 11-of-25 in Game 5 and 10-of-25 in their title-clincher in Game 6. The Gin Kings, for their part, knocked down a total of 38 in the series, with a single-match high of nine and low of two.

In their last semifinal series against Rain or Shine, Mr. Oftana and Co. fired 43-of-131 from the three-point territory (32.82%). The Gin Kings actually did better in their dispatching of Final Four opponent NorthPort, going 60-of-139 (43.17%) from the distance, and they hope to carry this improved touch over to the grudge rematch with TNT. — Olmin Leyba

POC to adopt local pool players after suspension by Asian body

THE Philippine Olympic Committee (POC) will adopt the orphaned national pool players after the Asian Confederation of Billiards Sport (ACBS) suspended the Billiards Sports Confederation of the Philippines (BSCP)for a maximum of three months.

The POC, however, will need the Philippine Sports Commission’s nod in order for the sport’s national squad to continue to receive financial support from the government despite the suspension.

“With this decision, the POC shall temporarily assume the tasks of the BSCP, including the supervision of arrangements and entitlements for national athletes under Billiard Sports, during the period of suspension,” said POC Secretary-General Wharton Chan in a statement on Tuesday.

The Qatar-based ACBS had actually decided to sack the BSCP for “not exceeding three months” as early as Feb. 18 but it was only last Sunday that ACBS Secretary-General Michael Al-Khoury informed the POC about it.

In that letter, the discipline’s Asian governing body asked the POC to probe into alleged violations of the BSCP including conflicts of interest, failure to hold elections for a long time, organizing tournaments without the necessary approvals from either the former or the world governing bodies of the sport and neglect of the national pool players. — Joey Villar

Philippines tops Pangea Cup International tourney

THE Cebuana Lhuillier-Philippine slo-pitch softball team overpowered the Saigon Buffalos, 27-1, to top the premier men’s Division A of the 2025 Pangea Cup International tournament in Clark Field, Pampanga.

The Filipinos, who overpowered the Korean Guzzlers, 17-3, in the semifinals, thus completed a magnificent three-peat feat after reigning supreme last year and in 2023 when they beat the Americans in the finals of both editions.

Amateur Softball Association of the Philippines President and Cebuana Lhuillier Chief Executive Officer Jean Henri Lhuillier saluted the team for the feat.

“I am incredibly proud of our men’s team for yet again showing what Philippine softball is all about,” said Mr. Lhuillier.

The dedication, teamwork, and resilience continue to inspire and this speaks volumes about their hard work and passion for the sport,” he added. — Joey Villar

Victoria cycling team aims to dominate the revival of Tour of Luzon

VICTORIA SPORTS PRO CYCLING TEAM

VICTORIA SPORTS Pro Cycling Team (VSPC) will embark on a European journey next month but the ultimate goal still resides at home when it attempts to conquer the dreaded mountains of Luzon.

Tagged as one of the title favorites, VSPC vowed to leave no stone unturned in the much-awaited revival of Tour of Luzon on April 24 featuring eight stages around Northern and Central Luzon with the Summer Capital of Baguio serving as the finale leg.

“Our aim is the top spot. ‘That’s the priority in Tour of Luzon,” founder, team leader and rider himself Pako Ochoa told The STAR as the 18-strong squad VSPC wrapped up its training camp in Batangas on Tuesday.

“We’ll see, while we can prepare the best way we can, same with other teams specially the Pinoy teams who are waiting for the Tour of Luzon.”

VSPC, founded by Mr. Ochoa in 2023 as one of the few continental teams in the country that flies the flag high in UCI tourneys abroad, spent a week in Anilao to rev up for four to five races in Spain, Turkey, Greece, Taiwan and the Philippines from March to April to start the UCI season.

Guided by former Spanish pro cyclist Hector Carretero as sports director as well as former local champions El Joshua Cariño and Arjay Peralta as assistants, VSPC dominated the PhilCycling National Championships for Road earlier this month in Tagaytay as a good momentum entering the season.

VSPC team captain Marcelo Felipe ruled the Men Elite Road Race, Nichol Pareja won silver in the Individual Time Trial (ITT) while its developmental riders Rush Camingao and Darius Villaseñor topped the U-23 Road Race and Junior ITT, respectively.

From there, the team figured in a four-hour training every day in Anilao, traversing challenging routes around Batangas, Cavite, Laguna and Quezon to ensure an in-form bearing with hopes of surpassing their international achievements in their first full-season last year.

And of the target is the crown in Tour of Luzon, unarguably the country’s most prestigious race since 1955 that had been in and out of circuit before its “Great Revival” this year made possible by the Metro Pacific Tollways Corp. and DuckWorld PH led by sports patron Manny V. Pangilinan.

Majority of the 18 riders, which also feature foreigners, will travel abroad for Tour of Taiwan, Tour of Hellas, Tour of Turkey and Tour of Asturias while seven locals led by captain Felipe, Pareja, Mr. Camingao, Ean Cajucom, Daniel Ven Cariño, Miguel Obmerga and Kenneth Maramba spearhead the team in Tour of Luzon.

Messrs. Cariño and Peralta will serve as sports directors for VSPC in the Tour of Luzon as Messrs. Carretero and Ochoa headline the delegation overseas with foreign riders Edgar Nieto and Eugenio Sanchez from Spain, Jeroen Miejers from the Netherlands and Nicolas Sessler from Brazil.

Up to 15 teams, including domestics and LGU squads from Iloilo, Nueva Vizcaya, Davao, Cebu and Tagaytay along with foreign clubs from Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand, will vie in Tour of Luzon that will have stops in Laoag, Vigan, Clark, Lingayen and Baguio.

More than the success in Tour of Luzon though, VSPC’s giant leap in the European circuit is all for the benefit of Philippine cycling sooner than later — individual growth, team performance and country culture-wise.

“The priority is the Tour of Luzon. That’s very important to us because it’s at home but we will not forget the races in Europe. Hopefully in three to four years, we can see some Filipinos fighting for stages in Europe. It’s difficult in one year but soon everybody will climb that European level. We have to go step by step,” added Mr. Carretero. — John Bryan Ulanday

Flirting with danger

The Lakers weren’t supposed to lose on Tuesday. After all, they faced the lowly Nets, and not for nothing did oddsmakers install them as six-point favorites heading into the set-to. Never mind the absence of Most Valuable Player candidate LeBron James and fellow starters Rui Hachimura and Jaxson Hayes. For all their roster deficiencies, they still had more than enough talent at their disposal — beginning with wunderkind Luka Dončić — to thrive. Instead, they found themselves absorbing an unwarranted setback that, at the very least, put them on notice for the immediate term.

True, the officiating left much to be desired; calls — or non-calls — in the crunch seemed to leave the Lakers at a disadvantage time and again. Yet, to argue that the men in gray were responsible for the outcome would be to ignore the more evident reason. They played badly, period. Dončić, well positioned to take the reins from opening tip to final buzzer, wound up with a forgettable outing; he was an atrocious eight of 26 from the field against supposed patsies. Meanwhile, backcourt mate Austin Reaves did even worse, going three of 14. And because the offense revolved around them, not even the outstanding showing of the likes of Gabe Vincent, Dalton Knecht, and Jordan Goodwin could make up for their shortcomings.

Don’t be fooled by the final score. Bottom line, the Lakers proved adept at snatching defeat from the throes of victory. Apart from the shooting woes of their principal playmakers, they were done in by their sloppiness with the ball and relative lack of hustle. And it wasn’t simply that they had eight more turnovers and four more fouls. They likewise gave up a whopping 16 offensive rebounds and had the ball stolen or blocked by the same number. In other words, they deserved to have their backsides handed to them for the second straight set-to.

For the Lakers, the bad news is that the road ahead figures to get much harder. They’ll be playing six matches in eight days, and twice against both the highly regarded Nuggets and Bucks. And, yes, they’re likely to continue missing James’ services throughout. Which is to say they will need to do better — make that much better — as a collective if they want to stay competitive in the tightly packed Western Conference. Else, they’ll be flirting with danger, and may yet find themselves relegated to the play-in tournament. The task won’t be easy, but they need to understand that they have more than enough to take the measure of the opposition. The question is whether they can tame themselves first.

“We have met the enemy, and the enemy is us.” — Oliver Hazard Perry

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

White House pushes back against recession talk as worries grow

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Rawpixel

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK — A key economic adviser to President Donald J. Trump on Monday pushed back on talk of recession stemming from uncertainty around his administration’s tariff policies, even as a survey of American households showed consumers growing more pessimistic about their prospects, and US stocks plunged.

In an interview with CNBC, Kevin Hassett, who heads the National Economic Council, said there were many reasons to be optimistic about the US economy, despite some predictions of a contraction in gross domestic product in the first quarter and concerns about inflation.

Mr. Trump’s tariffs on Canada, China, and Mexico were already having the intended effect of bringing manufacturing and jobs back to the United States, he said.

“There are a lot of reasons to be extremely bullish about the economy going forward. But for sure, this quarter, there are some blips in the data,” Mr. Hassett said, saying those stemmed from both timing effects of Mr. Trump’s rapid-fire tariffs push and some of what he called the “Biden inheritance.”

Mr. Trump and his team have repeatedly bashed the economy that they inherited from Democrat Joseph R. Biden. But when Mr. Trump took office in January, GDP growth had largely exceeded trend for two years, consumer spending was strong and unemployment was still near historic lows.

Several recent indicators, though, have pointed to a softening trend, and the New York Fed’s monthly Survey of Consumer Expectations out on Monday concluded: “Households expressed more pessimism about their year-ahead financial situations in February, while unemployment, delinquency, and credit access expectations deteriorated notably.”

The percentage of households expecting the jobless rate to be higher a year from now rose to its highest since September 2023.

Meanwhile, the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s closely followed GDPNow tracker suggests the economy could contract in the first three months of the year, largely due to an outsized drag from net trade.

Mr. Hassett said that would be a “very temporary phenomenon,” driven largely by a historical tendency to hold off on investment after a big election. This tendency should be resolved this month, and tariff uncertainty should be resolved in April, he said.

Mr. Trump himself in a Fox News interview aired over the weekend declined to predict whether his economic policies — centered so far on a blitz of tariff announcements, some of which have taken effect and others delayed or set to kick in later — would cause a recession.

US stock markets, already in retreat amid concern about his erratic decision-making on tariffs that most economists see as slowing activity and stoking inflation, on Monday were suffering their largest drop since Mr. Trump took office. The S&P 500, which hit a record high in mid-February, was down 2.7% and Nasdaq was off by 4%. Both were at their lowest since September.

“Trump was seen as the market’s savior, promising lower taxes and less stringent regulation. Now, his actions represent the harbinger of doom,” said Dan Coatsworth, investment analyst at AJ Bell in London. “The ‘R’ word is back on everyone’s lips as people ponder if trade tariffs will backfire and lead to recession rather than US economic prosperity.”

The S&P 1500 Supercomposite Index, one of the widest measures of the US stock market, has lost nearly $4.9 trillion in value since its record high in mid-February.

‘ADVERSE TARIFF ASSUMPTIONS’
Reuters polls of economists last week showed risks to the Mexican, Canadian and American economies are piling up amid a chaotic implementation of US tariffs that has created deep uncertainties for businesses and decision makers. The surveys showed 70 of 74 economists polled across Canada, the US and Mexico judged that the risk of a recession had increased, and upside risks to inflation in the US rose in particular.

Economists at Goldman Sachs have cut their 2025 US growth forecast and raised their inflation forecast, “both on the back of more adverse tariff assumptions.” They said their growth estimate was now below the consensus figure for the first time in two-and-a-half years.

Mr. Trump has imposed an additional 20% tariff on Chinese goods entering the United States, as well as 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico, although he suspended most of the duties on US neighbors until April 2, when he plans to unveil a global regime of reciprocal tariffs on all trading partners.

Mr. Hassett struck an upbeat note, arguing US tax cuts would boost the economy, increase investment and boost real wages by the second quarter, offsetting any negative fallout from the tariffs.

“Just be very wary… of conversations about recession,” he said. “What I think that what’s going to happen is the first quarter is going to squeak into the positive category, and then the second quarter is going to take off as everybody sees the reality of the tax cuts,” he said.

Austin Ramirez, president and CEO of hydraulic equipment maker Husco, based in Waukesha, Wisconsin, was among those who welcomed Mr. Trump’s campaign pledges to push through tax and regulatory reforms.

Those things are good for his business, Mr. Ramirez said, while tariffs and the threat of tariffs are negative for his business.

“Now,” he said, “the worry is that it’s all the bad stuff happening, and none of the good stuff.” — Reuters