Washington, D.C. | November 5, 2025 — Global Economic Report
The global economy is facing its most uncertain period in years, with a new November forecast warning of “limping” growth as nations struggle to navigate policy fragmentation, trade barriers, and debt pressures.
According to the report released by leading financial institutions and think tanks, uneven fiscal coordination between major economies is stifling investment flows and weakening global trade momentum, particularly between the U.S., China, and the European Union.
📉 Policy Fragmentation Weakens Global Growth
Analysts say geopolitical divisions and protectionist trade measures have pushed the world economy into a fragile equilibrium.
Many G20 economies are reporting sluggish industrial output, while emerging markets are grappling with high borrowing costs and volatile currencies.
“The world economy is growing, but unevenly — it’s a recovery that limps rather than runs,” said Dr. Maria Reinhardt, senior economist at the World Policy Forum. “Without coordination, 2026 could bring another wave of stagnation.”
💰 U.S. Shutdown Adds to Debt Concerns
The ongoing U.S. government shutdown, now the longest in history, is contributing to global fiscal uncertainty. Economists estimate that if the standoff continues through mid-November, it could add over $2 trillion to America’s potential long-term debt burden.
The IMF and OECD have warned that prolonged political paralysis in Washington could dampen investor confidence and slow capital inflows worldwide, especially in dollar-dependent economies.
🌐 Trade Barriers and Supply Chain Risks
Trade tensions remain a key drag on growth. New tariffs, digital export controls, and fragmented supply chain policies between China, India, and the West are creating inefficiencies that limit cross-border productivity.
At the same time, energy market instability — worsened by the ongoing war in Ukraine and OPEC production cuts — continues to strain global inflation targets.
⚙️ Regional Highlights
United States: Facing mixed signals; consumer spending remains resilient, but business investment has slowed.
Europe: Germany and Italy enter mild recessions; ECB warns of “stagflationary trends.”
Asia-Pacific: India remains a bright spot, with growth above 6%, while China’s slowdown continues amid property market stress.
Latin America: Economies remain volatile due to debt exposure and inflationary pressures.
🔮 Outlook for 2026
The consensus forecast now projects global GDP growth of 2.4% for 2026 — below the 3.1% average of the previous decade.
Economists call for greater international policy coordination, digital trade reform, and sustainable infrastructure investments to prevent a deeper slowdown.
“The biggest threat isn’t just economic — it’s institutional fatigue,” said Laurent Dubois, chief strategist at Global Macro Advisors. “Without leadership, fragmentation becomes the default.”











