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Hello, and welcome to Optimistic Economy, I'm a economist, Katherine Ann Edwards. I'm editor Robin Rousy. On this show we believe the U.S. economy can be better, and we talk about how to get there one problem in solution at a time. Big old problem today is the economy.
This is our inception episode where the problem we solve in the economy is the whole economy. I'd be happy if we just tune off to solve it, if we just explain it, if we just unravel the plot here, I would be happy with that. A couple of announcements before we get started.
“First, we're going to, you know, wait, was it clear?”
Today we're doing a checkup on the state of the U.S. economy. This episode is just where not going into a big policy, we're not doing history, it's just what on earth is going on right now. The title for this episode, "Working Title" is "Make it Make Sense." So that's what we're going to do.
But first announcements, our next Q&A episode is coming up.
We'll record it in about a month in the meantime. Send us your questions so we can work on answers, we can take them at [email protected]. You can also, that's the most effective way to get questions, but you can also slide into our DMs, and we'll try to get them there. I also want to thank our first formal, eternal optimist donor.
This is AJ from the Bay Area of California. There's somebody did suggest that we call this optimist prime, which is pretty good. It's pretty good if you're into transformers.
“I just want to say donations from optimists like you and by far the largest revenue stream”
for our little podcast enterprise. So if you can afford to desave a little bit on our RBF, please click on donated optimistaconomy.com. Next chapter is "Retcon." "Retcon." What do you got?
I have two things. One is we got a note from Monica and Massachusetts who was just commenting on something that you said about the day that you retire being the richest you'll ever be, and that in this day and age that that doesn't necessarily still hold, especially when capital returns to capital more than it returns to wages.
If you save for your entire life, in fact, you might continue to make more money than you're spending anyway after you retire. Self-serving sidebar should this befall you. Optimist economy is a global charitable distribution. Sidebar over.
Yeah, I mean, we think about wealth as the assets you hold, and then there's the value of those assets.
“So the life assets are different than the value of them?”
Well, we are holding something in the value increasing or decreasing. Okay. So in the life cycle model, the idea is that you are accumulating assets and building up wealth until you retire, and then you dissave, meaning you spend on your dissavings until you die.
Sorry. So what she's pointing out is that the assets that people have now, they're not necessarily adding to those assets in retirement, but you can be holding assets that do increase in value. So you're not necessarily still saving for retirement once you retire, but you've built
up so many appreciating assets that your wealth is actually getting higher, even though you're no longer contributing to it. And that's a really good point. I think that the notion of a life cycle model is really about the action that you are taking, your earning and saving, and then you're stopping earning and you're living off
of those proceeds.
And this really, her point is just that in the real world where economists don't always
live, it can be even more complicated than that. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. Next chapter in terms of conditions, oh, you have a lot, I have a lot.
I just wanted to go over, we're talking about, make it make sense the economy in 2026. Little glossary up in the end of the top. So I had a little bit of a lightning round, a recession is an economic downturn. It is determined by the National Bureau of Economic Research Business cycle dating committee. There is no government official declaration of a recession.
It's a group of economists that do it, and it is not two quarters of negative growth. It is a overall decline in economic activity, and they gauge it in real time, and they
Determine it after the fact.
So if we are in a recession in May of 2026, they will tell us in like Christmas, Christmas. Oh, Christmas. Oh, yeah. It's like it can be like a really long.
“So they didn't declare the recession that started in December 2007 until December of 2008.”
Wow. Okay. And it's mostly to hope that it breaks the right way. Mm-hmm. Yeah, you don't want to, you don't want to give a bag diagnosis and have people freak out.
Exactly. And spirits go, right, animals, spirits go, right. So the other term I wanted to bring up, which is how economists refer to the decline in economic activity. We often refer to that as slack, like there's slack in the labor market, and so slack is bad.
I always think of getting slack as good, but slack is bad.
And we think of the labor market as being tight versus loose. So tight is good, loose is bad, loose has slack, tight has no slack. And a tight labor market is from the point of view of the employer, right, that there's not a lot of employees to choose from. Yes, the hiring pool is quite tight, so they don't have the pickins or slim for them.
So for a worker, you want it to be tight. You want it to be tight. You don't want there to be a lot of slack. Okay. Yeah, you want to be tight, no slack.
If it's loose and there's lots of slack, a lot of competition for the slack. You laborers. So, as we see the labor market become more loose, we are worried that we are dipping into a recession. But it's a very fuzzy line.
We don't always see it happening in real time that well, which is why it tends to be determined
after the fact. The last thing I'll say is that we have something called the target, the inflation target. After the stack, inflation debacle of the late 1970s, early 1980s, the Federal Reserve made a lot of improvements to their policy making, culminating in adding a target that they needed to be able to say, this is where we want inflation to be and we will raise interest rates
to pursue a contractionary policy until inflation gets to this target and it's, they adopted in 2012, it's 2%. 2%. Yeah. So, 0 to infinity, inflation is just inflation and below 0 is deflation.
Okay. If it's under target, I call it good inflation because you don't want prices to fall, that would mean the economy is spiraling in free fall.
“So I think of under 2% as good inflation and over 2% as bad inflation because they're both”
technically inflation. So, that's just some cath from terminology. So, inflation, inflation, you're only going to hear on optimistic economy. I looked up the origins of 86. What are they?
I love this phrase. So, it's apparently in some dispute, but mostly it comes from hospitality, bars and restaurants. And of course it means in general, two things in a bar and restaurant. One is to 86 something from the menu, meaning you're out of it. The 86 is a customer, which means to throw somebody out or cut them off if they're drinking
too much. But the question is like, how did that become the term for that? And there is some speculation that it's 86 rhymes with nicks and that's essentially what it means. Oh, like a cockney thing where they like to use rhymes for words?
Yeah, I guess, but there was also a whole soda found soda jerk Lingo, especially in New York, in the 20s, 30s into the 40s, where soda jerks were, you know, they worked in pharmacies serving ice cream and ice cream sodas and various soda drinks and they had their own pattern. And like, there's books written about it.
It's so complicated, like you would say, pull a long one and spit on it, you know, and that meant something. And so 86 is also supposed to be one of those terms. I would have assumed if it was a number, I had no idea the origin. I would assume that the show was a number, it was like a police code, or like a security
code. Yeah, can you use 86 in a sentence, like a human would today, not a soda jerk in the 1930s?
“Yeah, 86 the guy in the booth, he's cut off, right?”
All right, so let's see if I can work 86 into the transition. I think our economy right now would be a lot better if we 86ed all of the policy that the president was pursuing. Excellent, we're going to take a break, we'll be right back.
We're recording this on April 30th, which is the day that the first quarter GDP
figures came out. And those said that the U.S. economy grew 2% in the first quarter. grew at an annualized pace of 2%. When you measure growth from one quarter to the next, that's quarterly growth. What economists want to know is if we grew at this rate for a year, what would the growth
Be?
Because the actual quarterly growth is so small.
And so we get a quarterly number and we put it into an annualized rate. So the economy grew at a 2% annualized rate, meaning if it grew at this pace, it would have grown 2% for the year. That was below expectations of a supposed to come in a little higher. The forecast was that it was going to be 2.2, it came in at 2.0.
So like many things over the past two years, not panic. Not great. Yeah, I was like, it was, I mean, don't get me wrong, I don't want us to be in a recession. But I was like, oh, that's just kind of bad. Yeah, I could have done a very drama, 2% didn't have any drama to it.
I can feel like the tagline for the economy right now is like, don't panic, don't not panic.
“Not panic, don't panic, but don't not panic, do you know what I mean?”
That's the economy. I feel like I'm living it every day. Now this was a relatively high stakes GDP report because the last quarter's growth was nearly zero. It was just 0.5% at an annualized rate.
So that was the fourth quarter of 2025. This is the government shut down, right?
Longa shut down in U.S. history, which was basically what got the blame for the really
the lack of growth. Yes. So we were coming off of a quarter in which the economy, I mean, this is the thing about going into a recession and what makes growth stronger, weak is what is driving the data that we're seeing.
In the fourth quarter, if everything was normal and the economy grew at a near zero percent annualized rate, we would think that we were in a recession. We had a causal, we had something to point to as the culprit.
“It was a really long government shutdown.”
Government spending is a part of GDP. So it wasn't that we needed to panic because the economy didn't grow because we know where it came from and it wasn't a slow down in economic activity. We did an episode on GDP last season and this was business's goal was to break down the economy in a way that we could point to what was causing overall changes.
So that's good, but we don't want that slow down to have a contagion effect so that the lack of spending from the government then creates a broader slow down in economic activity, which is what might have shown up in this quarter. Now, so it's the end of April, the data point we just got for GDP covers January through the end of March.
So it takes a month to produce the estimate and it will be revised twice at the end of May and at the end of June. And the last two quarters, almost all the revisions have been downward. So now some of the don't panic, but don't not panic comes from if it's 2% now. It might get revised downward as they're going to get revised down to like 1 9 or 1 8.
So you can still be growing just slowly, but you could be in a recession because other things are happening in the economy. They're slowing down enough. Okay. Interesting.
Interesting. It's not one thing, but it's not one thing. Yeah. Yeah. I have a PhD.
Yeah. I feel like I need like, you know, one of those TED Talk balloon charts where it's like, it's, it's, it's trade, no, it's government spending and they grow and shrink, you know, like that would help me understand what's going on in real time. What's really interesting to me is that even though the economy is, like you say,
you still above water by these measures as far as we know, that consumer confidence is like just tanking. So gallop does this poll. It's actually called the economic confidence poll.
“They basically ask people like, do you think the economy is getting better or worse?”
And 73% think it's getting worse and 23% getting, I think it's getting better. Yeah. It's, it's, we actually have multiple measures of confidence. So gallop does one and the conference board does another one. They do consumer confidence.
That's right. Yeah. And that becomes the consumer confidence index. And then the University of Michigan has, what's called the survey of consumers. All right.
And that one is the consumer sentiment index. And that is the one that, I think that's the one that economists follow the most. Oh. What's it saying? Oh, bad.
More bad is like, what's, what's the term real bad? Yeah. It's just showing a cratering of consumer confidence that basically started at the start of last year and has been considering the fall. So it's in one of the lowest rates we've ever seen outside of a recession.
So here's going to be a theme for this episode.
The economy keeps hitting marks that it never hits outside of recessions.
That is the problem is that it's not, and it doesn't hit them all at the same...
Because if they hit them all at the same time, we'd be in a recession.
“But we're hitting marks that you typically see in a recession and like random places at inconsistent”
times. Huh. Like buckshot. Yeah. Like the economy is weak.
We know that. But is it actually contracting? It's not contracting. But 0.5% growth annualized over a quarter is pretty low growth to hit outside of a recession.
Right. Like is the economy adding jobs? Yes, technically it is. But the total number of jobs that we added in 2025 was the lowest we've ever added outside of a recession.
Okay. And in fact, for all of calendar year 2025, we only added 180,000 jobs. For reference over the past three years or say the three years before that, we were adding
“150 to 350,000 in a month and then for as a year, we added 180.”
Wow. So it's less than 10% of what we would normally be adding in a year. Yes.
But again, the problem is is that all of these tend to have, there's reasons.
Right. There's reasons. Yeah. There's reasons. So we just did GDP.
The economy isn't, it's slow and growing. If I wanted to be confident that the economy was not going to tip into a recession, the number wasn't going to do it. And it didn't do it. I'm still not confident.
But yeah, we can still. So here's a thought that's like really hard to get your brain around. We could actually be in a recession, it just hasn't been declared yet. Sure. Sure.
And if that were the case, I would beg it of starting up Q4 last year. Fine. Alright. So you're not calling, but you're not calling it. I mean, it's not your job.
There's a board of academic economists on the east coast. Dr. mixed party pants from Boston, senior panel, they meet and they look at all this and they, they, how often do they meet? Like, does it just like, muslim pretty sure? I'm pretty sure.
What if the bat signal and they all get together like, yeah, but it's just, it's a graph with a line going down and then they gather on a pier right out to the dogs of Boston. And the workers are like throwing things into panels and they're just like, alright, it's time. Oh, please, it's Cambridge, Andy.
Yeah, they, they, they, they, they publicize their methods, like how they look at things and then the, you know, who's on the board and they're not in the official government. I mean, the reason why the NBER, the National Bureau of Economic Research does this is to make it easier to do economic research into downturns. And it's just, it's notionally a way for the economics profession to like harmonize
their research about recessions. Like, we can't set air recession if we don't agree when one started or started, so we all follow this definition and it just so happens that that becomes like the de facto official indicator of a recession. How about this?
I'm going to put my money on it. If they declare a recession while Trump is present, he's going to say they're not real and come up with a government agency to say that it's not a recession.
The U.S. government has never officially declared a downturn and there's no arm, which is
of the government that is tasked with doing it. But when this group of nerd geeks in Boston decide that we're at a recession, he will say that they are not legitimate and that they're not official and he'll come up with something else. Because they're not, they're not legitimate or official.
It's a private research group coming up with their own method. Yeah, but so is the consumer sentiment and frankly, also consumer competence, the conference board isn't a government agency. Yeah, so consumer sentiment and consumer confidence is just surveyed in. Yeah.
They surveyed people and they asked them a whole host of things and then they put it together into an index to portray confidence.
“So it's not like the BLS does it, it's not like the Census Bureau does it?”
These are private surveys, the sentiment index, why do we care about it? Is it a real thing? If people feel bad. Does it actually mean the economy is worse or that people are in a mood? And certainly consumer sentiment varies with political party.
So if your Republican in Obama is president, everything is awful, same thing Biden. We tend to have a big sentiment switch based on our party affiliation. But the reason why we care about it is that most economic decisions we make tend to be pretty long term. Like if I decide I'm going to buy a car, it is not like going to buy a chapstick.
I will go buy a chapstick and I will be fine. But if I need to go purchase a massive vehicle, I'm not going to do it overnight. I'm going to look at the market for a while, I'm going to gauge how much things cost, I'm going to look at the price of borrowing, I'm going to test out my options because it's a major purchase.
Well, the US economy runs a lot on major purchases when people buy cars, when people buy
Homes, the reason my people look at consumer sentiment is that it has to some...
of how people will be spending in a few months.
Right? Like if I don't talk about it. I don't know. I'll trade my, you get it. No, you get it.
I get it.
“If I bought a car today, I decided to buy a car probably six months ago and I started”
really the process in earnest three months ago. So if I don't feel good about the economy today, that means that cars not being purchased in six months. So it's a real, like you can bend your mind around the time of what confidence means. Well, here's another thing that the economy is doing right now that it doesn't normally
do.
We are seeing dips in consumer sentiment that are not predicting consumption.
So people feel bad. Consumption is still pretty high. Consumption is still pretty high. And people feel bad about the economy, but they're not, they're not pulling back on spending necessarily broadly.
Is this the case shaped economy situation? Yeah. So definitely one narrative here is rich people are spending poor people or not. Well, poor people just aren't spending anymore.
“They're already spending, or that they're already doing everything they had to spend.”
Yeah. Well, that the, or that consumption is being fueled by spending at the top and they, they buy 50% of everything anyway. That is incredibly hard to measure how much of spending goes to what percentage and how you define the percentage in terms of the case shape.
Like we live in a k economy, so to say that k shapeness is causing one thing or the other, like we've been in an increasingly unequal economy for decades. So for me, the attention on it right now is like, I'm like, okay, I'm glad that the Wall Street Journal is picking up on the idea that inequality might be bad. Yeah.
I've been at this party all night. You just got here. The things that we're seeing that are probably more tangible is one big increase in consumer debt. Yeah.
Credit card debt mostly, but also, yes, lots of credit card debt and we're starting to see steady increases in 90 day delinquency. I'm just going to say, I just think that on cars too and you're seeing it on health insurance policies, seeing it on credit cards, student loans, cars, really everything but mortgages in home equity lines of credit.
So what's interesting about the economy in like the run up to the great recession is that we had lots of credit, but the real explosion in credit, miscredit payments was all on mortgages and he locks home equity line of credits. Those are now tightly regulated and that market is pulled back. So if you look at credit today, mortgages in home equity lines of credit, they're at a different
world. They don't really look like everything else. They haven't seen an explosion in credit, they're quite tame and it's everything else that has just seen massive run up and numbers about the total amount of credit as well as the 90 day delinquencies.
It's coming from not the housing sector. It's coming from everything else. Interesting. So we are economy is still trucking along, but I mean, that is massive cracks beneath the surface coming from consumer debt.
“Well, Ron consumers, can we talk for a second about what's happening with prices?”
So the consumer price index was up 3.3% is that also an annualized figure? No. Yes, that's annual. They do monthly in annual. And for that one, I'm so glad we're talking about the method of statistical indices.
The consumer price index, it's a month of a month and a year over year. So it's the monthly change from February to March and then it's going to be the change from March of last year to March of this year, which is not the way GDP calculates it. GDP is the annualized rate of the quarters growth. Is this confusing?
It's always like we don't want you to understand the economy we're living in.
I don't panic, don't not panic. I can know I can understand why these things are useful. So CPI was up 3.3% in March of this year compared to March of the year before. But also a 0.9% from February to March. And a lot of that was oil prices because of the war, because of the war.
The feeling is that that's, I mean, obviously the war is not over, but that it's continuing to drive up oil prices, but by extension, that all sorts of other prices for goods. Yeah. So the inflation started to pick up in 2021 and then in the spring of 2022, it was getting higher and higher.
I mean, these rates are coming down. It's a four, five, you know, of Target is two. These are getting really high. The Fed starts raising rates in March of 2022 and the summer of 2022, we were seeing inflation at 8% annual growth from the summer before.
That inflation had a very clear cause, which was supply chain issues, meaning...
of consumer demand and consumer savings coming out of the pandemic.
Right.
“So you had people who were trapped inside their house for a year.”
Did you get some stimulus money? Yeah. Got some stimulus money? Saved a ton of money because they weren't doing anything or going anywhere or spending on anything.
So you had this massive, pent-up demand hit supply chains in a real way. And that is, I mean, the supply chain story is really the story of that inflation. And it, because it was demand driven, right? It was just whatever their charging, I will pay for it because I have not seen a human had a concert in two years.
People were willing to shell out and because they had the money to spend and they were willing to spend its demand drove inflation until it peaked and it interest rates did their job. It made that inflation painful and your demand decreased. You started to cut back on things and the price spikes started to decline. That gets us to the end of 2024 when inflation is in the mid-tos and falling.
And we hold on everything because then we have a new president. And when it comes to the economy this guy categorically sucks. I don't know how to say it. He is like two terrible economies under his belt, one from each term. And he got the golden gift.
“He is one of a, I think I, I like this up was, like, one of like four presidents who came”
to office when the economy wasn't bad. Really? Like he was actually gifted a strong economy. Like, 2017, it is a strong economy. Now, if some people say the economy at the end of 2024 wasn't actually that strong, but
it was moving in the right direction. I mean, inflation was falling precipitously towards the back half of the year. The Federal Reserve was lowering interest rates to ease the labor market and that all came to a screeching halt. So when I say this guy is categorically a bad economic president, I mean it because of
he both squandered what he had in a unique way.
I always felt like the story was a president, like take credit or get a lot of blame
for the economy, but that, but that usually presidents don't actually have that much control over the economy. I don't know. I wonder if this is the, not the case now, because this has been such dramatic, let's just say choices.
Okay, so I'll put it this way. There's lots of presidential turnovers that are simultaneous with really hard economic times. Yeah. And it's rare that you would be given an economy that's just strong.
I don't attribute that much economic policy to the city in president, because policy takes a long time to accumulate and have consequences and they have long antecedents. I don't know if I can really fault him through the COVID pandemic. Yeah, I was just saying that pandemic. He took so much credit for a strong economy that was in existence when he was elected.
“Anyway, so what is happening with tariffs and prices to go back to our CPI?”
Oil prices and an oil prices is that there's this real question as to why consumer spending has is being maintained even though prices are increasing. Yeah. And sentiment is so bad. In sentiment is so bad.
There's kind of like emerging data that what's happening is that people are shifting their consumption around non-tariff affected goods so the goods that have the highest tariff effect. They have the highest price increase and people are just spending less on that and shifting their spending to other things.
Like what? They're like responding to the tariffs without being penalized too harshly from the price increase because they're going to consume less of whatever is more expensive, but they're still consuming more of other goods. And it's good.
They're just not like they're moving to services. I know, I should say goods and services. Like there's a set of goods that are more expensive because of tariffs and the bigger the price increase due to tariffs, the less people are consuming of it. Which is explained why you would be both kind of okay but really pissed off because you
don't see the price increases, you're reacting to the price increases and you're shifting your consumption to other things. So it's like pain that you're trying to minimize which you could still be really pissed off about.
Yeah, did you read that story in the Wall Street Journal last week about, you know, basically
people who had enough money, but it was just like, no, I am not going to pay that for yes. There was a couple who bought the whole side of beef and they had it in there for the whole side of beef. Like, that's how they adapt.
Yeah. So they were just like, we're eating tons of steak but, you know, it's because we bought a whole cow. Yeah, they bought a whole side of beef. But then they wouldn't be like, but I'm not going to buy that coffee out.
It was just really remarkable because it wasn't the price point relative to their income. It was price point relative to what they were spending of like, if I make $200,000 a year,
That doesn't mean I think it's okay that coffee costs $10.
Like, I will not buy that coffee.
It's not that I can't afford $10 coffee that I'm opposed to $10 coffee on principle. So I refused to buy $10 coffee and they were talking about how like fascinating this was that it should be if money is no object, you would just keep your consumption bundled same. No.
The people are mad.
“Yeah, I mean, I think I can say for all of us, I don't know anyone who likes living”
through special economic times and how much we're learning right now is, it's like a painful lesson because this sucks. So the, I think following tariffs can be really hard and actually shout out to my compatriots at Bloomberg who have a flow chart of every tariff announced on every country. It's a tariff tracker.
Like, I've got a 30 inch monitor thing doesn't fit. It's a tariff tracker of every announced tariff, what happened if it's in court filings, if it was revoked, if they had an agreement reached, if it was announced at 40, but actually
never implemented at 40, like it was just, it's, it's absolute mess.
The results about a year after we embark on this tariff dance is that we now have the highest tariffs in the world lower than what is often announced, but still the highest in the world in the highest, we've had since the 30s. And that hurts, it hurts and it's pushing up prices and it's going to keep pushing up prices.
“Yes, and now we just added fuel to that fire, literally, because of Iran.”
Yeah. Yeah. So the other thing that happened this week, and I guess for people listening last week, is that the last, we had the last meeting of the poll, the Federal Reserve with Jerome Powell as Chairman.
Yeah.
Now, we talked about this in our Fed episode.
He is still on the board, and he can go back and finish out the last two years of his 14-year board term. And he announced that he was going to do so. Yes, he was going to do so. He felt like he wanted to make sure all of the various prosecutorial threats against himself
in the Fed in general were wrapped up, and then he kind of made a vague suggestion to steadiness. So for the last few meetings, when the Fed has met, and there had yet to be announced a new nominee for Fed chair, the Fed has voted to hold interest rates study, meaning that they weren't going to increase them to fight inflation or decrease them to try and stimulate the economy.
And most of the dissenting opinions were on the decrease rate side. And these were, a lot of people thought were almost like tryouts for being appointed chair that these Fed board governors were trying to signal to Trump that they were amenable to having rates being dropped, because Trump has said that the rates need to be lower. And Trump's man on the Fed, and I say that because this man was appointed to the board
of governors and kept his job in the White House for many months, Trump's man on the Fed has voted to decrease them every time. This last meeting, the Fed met, and once again, the Fed, the Trump man, voted to decrease interest rates to juice the economy. Three other people dissented, this is so confusing, they dissented with the statement, not
the action. It's really, that was totally crazy. What I understand, that, that the statement should signal that the Fed was just as likely to raise rates as lower them in the future. The projection of the statement was, we're going to lower rates soon once we feel like
prices are under control. And what they thought that that was not correct that the statement should have said, if prices keep going up, we will raise them again. Because remember, the reputation of the Fed in fighting inflation is paramount. The fastest way to increase inflation in the U.S. economy is for people to not believe the Fed
cares about it. But in fact, really good historical evidence, when a politician interferes with the central bank, it results in higher inflation. For two reasons, one, they tolerate more inflation and they lose credibility that they care about inflation.
So Powell has said he's going to stay on the board.
“You've got three open market committee members who said you need to make sure people know”
that we can raise rates again, and not just lower them when we feel like it's okay. The official kind of policy when it comes to something like a price spike that comes from oil that's really easy to see cause and effect is that the Fed should quote unquote look through it. Wait it out.
Wait it out. Yeah. Right. And it's the same thing with the bad GDP report, like this is a price spike that we know came from oil.
We know what is causing these problems.
It's just again, we don't think it's permanent.
We think that it'll go away.
Yeah. It's the same thing. We're taking these hits, but we think that because we can see the cause, it's not necessarily reflecting weakness in the economy. But for all of these things, it could mean that the economy will be weak soon if the effect
holds. I mean, this is one of the most extended periods of economic uncertainty that I could possibly. Yeah.
“It's just been, what, a year and a half of this, I've just like, what?”
What? I mean, I need to shout out my brother when he was learning how to drive. He would follow too closely the car in the front of him and at points, my dad would say, like, just hit him.
This suspense is killing me, just hit him and then we can move on.
So I feel like a lot of us are in this point of the economy of like you either need to stop the car or hit him. Like, I don't know if we're just, we've been right at the edges. Hit him. Or stop pull over something.
You know what, we haven't even, it's true. It's like we're like in a car or somebody doesn't know how to drive yet and they're just like, yeah, and you're just, like, just getting carsick, getting carsick and holding on to, I don't know what it's actually called because my family were just for her to it is the old handle where you grab the handle at the top of the door and go, oh, yeah.
Yeah.
“Yeah, we're just white knuckle grabbing onto that.”
We are. We are. God. So we still haven't talked about immigration. Yeah, we haven't even talked about immigration.
I was reading that Dallas Fed reported you read that about the new kind of baseline for how many jobs we need to add and they were estimating way more people have left that are net, our net immigration is even lower than the government has been estimating. So, you know, it turns out that if 500 to 600,000 people leave either voluntarily or because they've been terrorized or because they've actually been deported, then you don't have to
add as many jobs to stake sort of even with your workforce needs and it also the labor force participation has been going down anyway. Yeah. So, just to sum up where we've been so far because we're staying on the GDP was low and we knew why.
Same thing with consumer sentiment. We know why consumer sentiment is bad because people are seeing price increases. They are upset about it, but we're still not seeing consumption actually fall. And part because people are shifting their bundle and in part because people are relying on credit and debt.
The prices, we know why prices are going up, we've instituted tariffs and we waited for them to take effect and now we have an oil price crisis. So we, again, it's not good, but we know the cause and there's a non-economic reason. We are not adding jobs. Part of the reason why we're not adding jobs is because the working-age population in the
U.S. This century has only grown because of immigration. So if, like, tomorrow, we were able to effectively stop another immigrant from coming to the U.S. ever again, our population would immediately decline. And not decline in a few years, I mean, it would decline the hour that we close our borders,
our population would start to decline. And had we not had immigration in the century, our population in particular, our working-age population would be in decline. So if you target immigrants through deportation and through fear tactics that are meant to make people afraid to be here or not comfortable to be here, you are going to reduce
the size of the labor force, which means you don't need to add as many jobs. So this really weak year of only adding 180,000 jobs, again, we have the cause and front of us, we're deporting and scaring off working-age people.
“So the typical number, how many jobs is the U.S. need at a month?”
That is a function of the growth of the working-age population. For a long time, it's been north of 200, and then 200,000 jobs to 100,000 years, supposed to add 200,000 jobs a month in the U.S. to keep up, to keep up. Population growth, new people coming in, people coming out of school, looking for jobs. And if we don't add enough, we would see it in the unemployment rate.
What's happened this year is that we are not adding jobs, but the unemployment rate is not going up. And what the report that Robin brought up from the Dallas Fed is we now think the number that we need to add each month might be as low as, I mean, I've seen low as like 20,000. Maybe 50,000.
Yeah, I mean, it's practically zero. It's weird because it sounds on the surface like things are in balance. Oh, we are not creating a lot of jobs, but we don't have a lot of workers, so unemployment is low, and it all seems good, but it seems actually not to be good. No, it's like in balance on the aggregate, but so the example I gave I was actually just
on a podcast recently, and I gave this example and had someone right in to say they found
it to be particularly powerful of an explanation, was if you were worried about men, and
How men need jobs and men don't have a place to work in that you men's econom...
is falling in the U.S., and I told you, okay, easy solution, I'm going to fire a million
nurses, so now men can take those jobs, you would be like, come on, men and women don't work the same jobs, men don't want to be nurses, you can't just fire a million women who are nurses and expect men to take those jobs. That is essentially replaced women with immigrant. If I were to fire a million immigrants and say, well, now native workers can take those
jobs, they just, it does not match, they don't work the same jobs. So you're seeing this like, Powell called it a "curious kind of balance" that the labor market isn't growing, but it isn't receding, it's been steady in terms of the number of jobs and unemployment we have, and yet we have clear evidence of mismatch between who wants a job and the jobs that are available.
So it's in balance on aggregate, but it's not matched. And we know why, and that's hurting both job seekers and the industries that have lost all those workers.
“Yes. Now, worth it to remember that many industries begged for exceptions to any of the deportation”
practices because they rely on authorized workers and a lot of them were very quietly successful at making sure that their workers weren't targeted. So, you know, instead you have these very visible, hateful influxes of ice into cities and it's not all for show, but it's a facade. The real people who win off of our current broken immigration system and tacit acceptance
of unauthorized immigrants as workers that hold up our economy are the employers. They are the winners here. It's a facade because it makes it seem like we're taking enforcement to another level when really we're just taking it like, it's just a road show. And I suppose at some point, I start to sound crazy.
Unhelpful. What's like, well, all these things have bad things, and we know, just because we know why. Just because we know why. It's okay.
Yeah. A little bit, but we know why, but that doesn't mean we're going to change course. It doesn't mean we're going to fix it.
“And I think this is the reason that I, I think people who pay attention to the economy are”
so anxious about it, is that whether or not you just see prices go up at your gas station or you actually read the Wall Street Journal every day, the signals are all there. And they're all, like you said, like, they're flashing yellow if not red, right? I think there's a certain desperation to not enter another recession that is carrying the momentum to not be in one.
And the fear of whatever recession could look like if we actually declare it, either they have a, they have a real kind of own momentum. And there is a general fear that we had so much suffering in the economy from the pandemic that to enter a recession so quickly would just leave households so battered. But now the question is, do we even need a recession if there's this much pain outside
of it? Right. Does it feel unprecedented? I mean, I think sometimes I think we use it, we throw that word around. But this kind of combination of things, it just really does seem like nothing that I have
experienced in this combination before.
“So the way that I think about it is that recessions tend to hit certain beats.”
Whenever the economy enters a downturn, they hit the marks. They don't hit them in the same way.
They're not always wearing the same outfit, the tempo changes, but like they hit marks as
they move across the stage. I think what makes the current period so difficult is that they're hitting a mark. We don't hit. It doesn't ever slow down like this. You know, it doesn't, it doesn't, we don't stop, we fall, we get back up.
We don't actually hold in place. But I mean, I think one of the most visible aspects of this is the total number of jobs in the US. You can look at it over a 90-year period and I mean, it is just an upward line. And you can see the last year and a half is just flat.
And we've never been flat. The US economy job growth has never been flat. And we are not in the economy that holds steady. I know. And just like, so steady, you just feel so uncomfortable.
It's so uncomfortable to be holding steady.
First of all, like, I don't know that it is steady, like it's averaging out.
It's averaging out. It's not steady. It's not steady. What's that joke about statistics, you've got one foot in fire and one foot in ice, and you say, on average, I'm fine.
It's like, on average, we're fine. Not a good average. Not a good. You don't want to look at the averages here. Average is here.
Not good. I guess one way to think about it is, like, this is the economy now.
What would actually happen for it to break good or bad?
Sure.
Like what needs to happen next?
One path forward is prices stop rising. Yeah.
“The Supreme Court could again rule on tariffs.”
The Congress could change and they could overrule tariffs. The war could end or prices could stabilize and drop again. Yeah. It all hinges on prices because once prices are again steadily and predictably declining, the Fed feels free to lower interest rates to ease up lending and spending in the economy.
That signals to businesses that things have returned to normal and they start making decisions differently. Once they see leadership from the Fed that we're actually on a sustainable path, you know, they use those lower interest rates to expand, to borrow whatever, and they start hiring
and expanding an earnest and that kicks us off on like breaking good.
Yeah. Next path out of here is that those prices don't fall and the kind of contagion effect of higher gas prices into goods and services where gas isn't just something you consume. It's an input into the production of other goods and the delivery of services. Prices go up enough that the Fed has to raise interest rates.
And this time people, they're not going to wait like, this is the writing on the wall and they pull back UC mass layoffs and we're in recession.
“We see people, you mean business leaders, you mean individuals, consumers?”
Businesses and individual consumers, like the Fed raises rates again and there's like, there's a, that's it aspect to the economy of like, I am holding on and that's it. Yeah. Another path out of here is that the prices go up enough and consumers get spooked enough that they pull back consumption.
We have a bad GDP report and that's enough to convince people that there's no going back on the economy. We're going to be in a recession and then you have like, mass layoffs businesses get spooked and they start to prepare for a recession. I think those are probably the three most likely paths, all of them kind of contagion
through prices. Interesting. Now, other thing that could happen is that you have some type of AI bubble reckoning where the incredible valuation of AI gets reconsidered by the stock market and the stock market goes into what we call correction where it declines by a certain percentage.
Once it goes into correction, there's pressure on publicly owned companies to downsize. Those are the paths out of here. Our most hopeful path is that we are able to turn off tariffs and get to lower interest rates. Trump's preferred path out is to pack the federal reserve board of governors to lower interest rates.
What's kind of funny about that is that he, like, well, first off, he's not his best
messenger because he always talked about how amazing the economy is, which if the economy
was amazing, he wouldn't need to lower interest rates. But also, it won't work. Lower interest rates. It won't lower prices. No, if you lower interest rates to juice the economy because borrowing is cheaper, this
is animal spirits. Part of it comes from borrowing being cheaper, but part of it comes from people believing that we are in a place to lower interest rates, soundly, because the Fed is making good decisions. It's faith in the Federal Reserve and think that the lower interest rates now, it's
just going to lead to higher prices in the future, like the lack of credibility from
“the Fed is as important as the actual move in interest rates when it counts.”
So I don't think he realizes that that's not a path forward. Like he convinces the board to lower error, like gets enough people fired, interferes at the Fed, gets interest rates lowered without the conditions to have interest rates lowered. He might get something from it, but the actual good stuff will only come when they're still faith in the Federal Reserve.
And I say this, so you might be listening to me and like, "Hey, man, I don't really give a f*ck out of the Federal Reserve. I don't know anything about them. Their confidence or their credibility doesn't matter to me at all. I just want to have cheaper things and lower interest rates would help me."
Yeah, you're great, and I want you to keep doing you and to make decisions that are right for you and your family and the economy and not listening to me at all. Like, "Shut your shot. Do your best. Make it work.
That is you." People who are highly influenced by interest rates in the perspective of interest rates going forward, the Fed's credibility with them matters a lot. Yeah. You see interest rates as it filters down through consumer prices for certain long-term purchases.
But there are businesses and entities that will live and die by interest rates and that credibility matters a ton. I don't know. I mean, there's probably like 20% of Americans who think the Fed should be ended anyway. Like, that's not the broader consumer credibility.
It's the credibility with the financial institutions and financial sector.
Right. Right.
“Do you have an optimistic note here at the end of all?”
Yeah, I mean, this isn't the most uplifting episode knowing that the reason why we are not
in recession so far is because we've been able to reason and explain away the really bad things we've seen. I think I didn't dwell on this enough. It is also not as bad. Like, you know, I understand 2007, 2008.
It's not 2007. Yeah. We are not in the great recession. We are not in a financial crisis. There's a weakness in the economy that is accumulating and hardening.
But like, you might think that right now feels bad. But if an unemployment rate were 10%, I promise you would feel worse. Like, we shouldn't lose sight of the strength that we have. Like, yes, weakness is coming from a lot of directions, but we still have an incredible strength. And I am of the mind that no individual can be expected to see the force for the trees
of the broader economy strength when they are suffering.
And so I would never ask you to do that.
We didn't talk about how, like, strong the U.S. is. And in fact, I've talked to a lot of economists who have said, like, I can't not believe we have not sent into a recession already. Yeah. It is testimony to how strong the economy is that we haven't.
And if it doesn't feel strong for you, I'm not saying you're wrong. Yeah. But it is, I feel like, like, those toys that you punch and it just kind of keeps popping back up. And I felt that way pretty much since the pandemic.
I mean, I know we did a lot to try to bounce back from the recession in the spring of 2020. And the tariffs, especially in the uncertainty and just kind of the ongoing uncertainty. And yet we're Bob and Reven and we're, like, as an economy, just still, you know, all these players adjusting how they can.
It's a big, big, big dynamic economy.
It is. And it is not on you to have to diagnose the source of your economic frustrations. It's like the economy is weak. There's lots of uncertainty. There's a lot of things we don't know.
Don't lose sight of what we do know, which is it is not the fault of prices in April of 2026 that health insurance is so expensive or that the economy is so unequal or that the labor market is so stacked against workers or that workers of the lost power. That is not an April 2026 problem.
“That is a 21st century problem and I think that, like, these moments, these acute moments”
in the macro economy, they make us feel all these pain points that are not of the moment. You know, we're going to be okay. We're going to be okay. Even if the economy enters a recession, we can get to the other side of it. Yeah.
I mean, we don't have a lot of experience with economic declines, not being cataclysmic. But that's how they normally are. And if we go into one, it will be bad, especially for the people in it. But we can help people. We know how to identify people who are hurt and we can get to the other side of it.
And the long solution does not change. The long solution is we need better economic policy. We need better economic structures and no recession will change what we need in our economy long term. We're going to take a little break and we'll be back with executive orders and spiritual
sponsors. I'm going through our outline. I'm like economy bad, economy bad, another bad thing, bad, bad, bad, bad, bad. Executive orders. I'm showing an executive order this week from Brian Field and Reading California.
Brian suggested everyone in elected office should be forced to do their own taxes every year until the tax code is properly simplified. Brian. That's right. Zero.
Do you have an executive order? My executive order for the week is that places of employment should not be allowed to charge you for parking. Not sure if I'd do or said or not. Okay.
I mean, as a place that's just overrun with traffic, I'm sort of like, ah, man, I don't know. I mean, but like doctors work at hospitals and they have to pay to park there. Yeah, I worked in downtown LA, I had to pay to park there. It seems like it's a wage cut to make people pay for parking, but to have parking be the
only way to access their job. So I feel like it should fall under a wage an hour. Okay. In order to get to your place of employment, they have to park a car there. You cannot charge them for parking the car.
And otherwise you just have to, well, tax you and spend it on public transit.
“And you have to run a very complex shuttle system, so don't charge for parking.”
It just feels like a wage cut. Okay. Okay. Spiritual sponsors?
My spiritual sponsor for the week is genre specific independent book stores.
So you probably have, or maybe you have a murder book store or like a mystery book store.
Sure. Crime book store, romance book stores.
“I recently went on West 42nd Street in New York City to a drama book store.”
And almost everything on offer was place. It was lovely. It was such a lovely setup. They had books about the film industry and theater and history and things like that. But they had just more plays than you've ever seen in one location.
But the real showstopper was they had a sculpture called The Book Warm.
And it was hundreds of books elevated above the store that was like, you know, curling around like a worm that eventually hit into the wall. Turns out, people who do set design can do all kinds of fun. They can. They can.
“So crazy specific independent book stores that are taking advantage of capitalism to do”
some of the real niche and real awesome. I love you. Excellent. Yeah.
Just yesterday, we went to Barnes and Noble where we almost never go.
But Barnes and Noble has a fantastic new stand. They have, I mean, it must be 150 linear feet of magazine shelves. And magazines you didn't know existed. For instance, I saw the Guardian, the newspaper just a magazine called The Guardian Long Form.
And the cover is, you know, neon orange and Nordic home magazine, you know, country cottage and southern coastal living and it's just great news and and they're just hard to find anywhere. But there's so much fun. And for environmental reasons, I try to only subscribe online to magazines.
But like, there's really nothing like getting southern living in your hand. Yeah. Yeah. [MUSIC] All right, that's another episode of Optimist Economy.
We hope this made sense. I hope this made sense. Didn't, didn't make you more. We're hoping leaving you at least informed.
“If not, popped into sometimes there's comfort and gut in like clarity, right?”
I'm pretty new and sure. Yeah. Okay. Well, in that case, the Optimist Economy podcast is edited by Sophie Luan and our video production for social media is by Andy Robinson.
Who is live in Houston, who is live in Houston. He's actually here, video close from the show for you to share our available on TikTok Instagram, YouTube and now Facebook and we have a chat room on Substack for anyone who subscribes, paid or unpaid to Optimist Economy. T-shirts, hats, tote bags, those are all available on our website.
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