IMF OUTLOOK: ASIA GAINS MOMENTUM AS THE WEST LOSES SPEED
The International Monetary Fund’s October 2025 update to its World Economic Outlook may appear cautiously encouraging at first glance. Yet beneath the modest upgrade lies a far more significant story—one of shifting economic power, evolving trade routes, and a gradual redrawing of the global investment map.
Back in July, the IMF projected global growth of 3% for 2025. Its latest forecast nudges that figure up to 3.2%, while 2026 is now expected to deliver growth of 3.1%. On paper, the revision looks minor. In reality, when measured against a global economy worth more than $100 trillion, even a few tenths of a percentage point translate into vast sums of economic activity.
More revealing than the upgrade itself are the forces driving it. According to the Fund, the global economy is being shaped by two competing dynamics: the economic effects of President Donald Trump’s tariff agenda and a powerful wave of private-sector investment centered on artificial intelligence.
The tariff increases promised during Trump’s 2024 campaign—and subsequently implemented—have proven less disruptive than many economists initially anticipated. The IMF highlights several reasons: supply chains have shown greater resilience, businesses have rerouted trade flows with surprising agility, and widespread retaliatory measures have largely failed to materialize. Rather than steering global economic transformation, the United States increasingly appears to be reacting to changes already underway.
Notably, the IMF estimates that the decision by many countries to avoid broad retaliatory tariffs contributed an additional 0.3 to 0.4 percentage points to global output relative to previous forecasts. At the same time, investment linked to artificial intelligence has emerged as a significant short-term growth catalyst, particularly in the United States. However, the Fund cautions that this surge may resemble a speculative investment cycle more than a lasting productivity revolution. As FEE has noted elsewhere, today’s rapidly expanding AI sector could face growing pains—or even a correction—before reaching its full economic potential.
Despite the upgraded outlook, the IMF remains clear on one point: global growth continues to operate below the pace seen in previous decades. The relatively limited impact of tariffs so far offers two important lessons. First, businesses have become increasingly adept at adapting, whether by stockpiling imports ahead of policy changes or relocating suppliers. Second, the economic costs of protectionist policies often emerge gradually rather than immediately.
The Fund warns that the ultimate consequences of current trade barriers “have yet to materialise.” Inflation remains uneven across regions, while risks continue to build within financial markets. Elevated debt levels, rich asset valuations, and growing interconnectedness between traditional financial institutions and non-bank lenders all raise the likelihood of future market disruptions.
As tariffs deliver less damage than expected, businesses and investors are accelerating a broader strategic shift—one that increasingly favors Asia over the traditional economic centers of the West.
Asia’s Rising Influence
Beyond short-term economic cycles, the IMF report highlights a deeper structural transformation. While growth in North America and Europe continues to moderate, emerging economies—particularly those across Southeast Asia—are becoming increasingly attractive destinations for global capital.
The region’s appeal is evident in the scale of investment already flowing into it. More than $100 billion has been committed across Southeast Asia, reflecting growing confidence in its long-term prospects. India remains a standout example, with the IMF projecting growth of 6.6% in 2025, making it one of the few major economies capable of sustaining robust momentum despite mounting global challenges.
The IMF’s latest projections reinforce this trend. With tariff disruptions proving less severe than feared, multinational corporations and institutional investors are increasingly redirecting attention from the mature economies of the West toward the faster-growing markets of Asia.
Manufacturers are relocating supply chains and production facilities to ASEAN nations such as Vietnam, Thailand, and Malaysia, where tariff exposure is lower and supply-chain flexibility is greater. At the same time, investors are targeting infrastructure projects, equity markets, and strategic industries positioned to benefit from favorable demographics and expanding domestic demand.
As economic expectations soften across the United States and Europe, Asia’s resilience becomes increasingly difficult to ignore.
The artificial intelligence boom is also taking on a distinctly international character. Southeast Asian economies are rapidly establishing themselves as important links within the global AI value chain. Their combination of skilled labor, competitive infrastructure costs, and innovation-friendly policies is attracting growing interest from technology firms and investors alike.
The result is a gradual but unmistakable redistribution of economic opportunity. While Western economies wrestle with slower expansion, persistent inflationary pressures, and the lingering effects of trade disputes, Asia is capturing an increasing share of global growth.
This shift extends beyond a temporary economic cycle. It reflects a deeper transformation in the geography of capital and commerce—one that is elevating Southeast Asia from a supporting role to a central position within the global economy.
A More Adaptive Global Economy
Even with the upward revision, the IMF does not portray a world economy enjoying a full-fledged recovery. Growth remains subdued by historical standards, and risks continue to accumulate beneath the surface.
Yet the fact that forecasts have moved higher rather than lower sends an important signal. The global economy has demonstrated a remarkable capacity to adapt. Trade routes are diversifying, technology investment continues to accelerate, and capital is discovering new pathways around traditional constraints.
As IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva observed, the world has displayed “more resilience than expected.”
That resilience, however, is not evenly distributed. The global center of economic gravity is steadily shifting eastward, and among the clearest beneficiaries of this rebalancing are the dynamic economies of Southeast Asia. As investors search for growth and businesses seek new opportunities, the region is increasingly emerging not merely as an alternative—but as a destination at the heart of the next chapter of global economic expansion.