Forget the budget, Trump’s liberation day will shape world

Albanese is poised to call an election in the days after the budget. Trump’s tariff plan could drop soon after the prime minister has visited the governor-general.
Australians won’t be on their lonesome in deciding their next government under the shadow of Trump.
Loading
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney launched his election campaign on Sunday; voters there will go to the polls on April 28. Carney described Trump’s tariffs and the president’s musing about turning Canada into America’s 51st state as “the most significant crisis of our lifetime”.
We already have evidence of what April 2 could mean.
Steel prices in the United States have soared by almost a third since Trump announced his first round of tariffs in February. Those higher prices have been great for American steelmakers and overseas ones, such as Australia’s Bluescope, that have a large production presence in the US.
But that price spike is feeding into everything that uses steel (and aluminium). The carmaker, the washing machine manufacturer, the home builder – all are now paying more in a development that ensures inflation will rise.
Loading
That’s why last week, the Federal Reserve downgraded its forecasts for American economic growth this year while upgrading its expectations for inflation.
That’s just from steel and aluminium. Now magnify that on just about any item going into the US.
Peter Costello had to pull together a budget while dealing with the east Asian financial crisis. Wayne Swan had to contend with the global financial crisis. Josh Frydenberg cobbled together a budget in the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic.
But a pre-election budget to be released before the world sees Trump’s latest assault on the global economy? That’s a new level of uncertainty.
Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter.