Wednesday March 12, 2025

U.S. tariffs, restrictions on trade to hamper Finland´s exports: Rehn

Published : 11 Mar 2025, 23:45

Updated : 11 Mar 2025, 23:49

  DF Report
Olli Rehn. Photo Finnish government by Laura Kotila.

Governor of the Bank of Finland Olli Rehn on Tuesday said that the tariffs and restrictions on the trade imposed by United States would hamper Finland´s exports and curb private consumption and investment.

“Widespread US tariffs on its imports from EU countries would, if implemented, hamper Finland’s goods exports, as the United States is an important export market for Finland. The elevated uncertainty may in itself curb private consumption and investment, as well as growth in Finland’s export markets,” Rehn said at a press conference.

He also said that Europe and Finland require investment in security and must find solutions for structural challenges in the economy.

“Defence investments now have to be stepped up in an environment where the public deficits of EU Member States are already large. For this reason too, we need common European solutions that must be implemented in ways which effectively strengthen our shared external security,” he said.

He said that uncertainty is weighing on investment in the euro area and on its exports, and the risks are on the downside.

“A momentous shift is taking place in global politics in a dangerous way for Europe,” said the Governor, adding, “Europe must rapidly come up with measures to support Ukraine and to boost its own defences.”

Inflation is stabilising at the target level, but growth in the economy is subdued, he said.

A significant increase in Europe’s defence spending and in its investment in defence could increase the euro area’s production.

The Finnish economy is recovering from a recession. Growth in the economy is nevertheless modest and is being restrained by the low level of investment, in particular.

The Bank of Finland’s March 2025 interim forecast expects the economy to grow at the same pace as it had forecast in December 2024, but the risk of weaker growth has increased. Growth in the Finnish economy will be 0.8% this year and will rise to 1.8% in 2026. In 2027, the final year of the forecast period, growth will slow to 1.3%.

Calculations by the Bank of Finland showed that United States’ import tariffs targeting EU countries and China could reduce global gross domestic product (GDP) by just over 0.5% in 2025 and again in 2026.

The impact on the euro area’s economy could be slightly greater than this. A trade war may lead to both upward and downward pressures on prices.

The Eurosystem forecast for the entire euro area shows an annual inflation rate of 2.3% for 2025 and 1.9% for 2026. Measures of underlying inflation also suggest that the inflation rate will settle at around the 2% target on a sustained basis.

“In the European Central Bank’s Governing Council, we decided to further lower interest rates this month, as inflation has fallen and the economic outlook has weakened. We are not pre-committing to a particular rate path but will take decisions on a meeting-by-meeting basis, the next meeting being in April. As there is high uncertainty, the Governing Council will maintain complete freedom of action,” said Rehn. This was the sixth reduction in the deposit rate, which was lowered by 0.25 percentage points, to 2.5%.