โWho knows how the market is going to react in a day, in a week?โ he asked.
Department of Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Sunday questioned concerns that the U.S. economy will enter a recession in the near future following President Donald Trumpโs announcement that nearly every country in the world will face tariffs.
Trump announced a 10 percent baseline tariff on almost every country, while other countries received higher levies based on tariffs they already levy on the United States, as well as other factors. On Thursday and Friday, major U.S. stock indexes dropped more than 5 percentage points apiece.
Bessent, when asked on NBC Newsโ โMeet the Pressโ about how long Americans would have to โhang toughโ amid the market shift, said, โI reject that assumption; there doesnโt have to be a recession.โ
โWho knows how the market is going to react in a day, in a week? What we are looking at is building the long-term economic fundamentals for prosperity,โ he added, saying the tariffs were implemented as a means to negotiate with other countries.
Bessent also said he is not concerned with the stock marketโs initial reaction to the tariff announcement because โthe market consistently underestimates Donald Trump.โ
โI remember that in 2016โthe night President Trump wonโthe market crashed, and it turned out he was going to be the most pro-business president in over a centuryโmaybe in the history of the countryโand we went on to very high after-inflation returns for the next four years,โ he said.
At one point, he said that it is a โfalse narrativeโ that Americans close to retirement may not retire because their savings may have been impacted due to the stock market decline.
Bessent has described the tariffs as measures that will โescalate to de-escalate,โ and has called them necessary negotiating tools. The former hedge fund manager said on Sunday that fears over retirement plans and a possible recession are a โfalse narrative.โ
โAmericans who want to retire right now, the Americans who put away for years in their savings accounts, I think they donโt look at the day-to-day fluctuations,โ he said.
Byย Jack Phillips