Everyday Economics: Data blackout: Why the growth narrative doesn’t hold up

Spread the love

The federal shutdown has darkened the dashboard. Key September releases are delayed – most notably CPI now slated for Oct. 24, just days before the Oct. 28–29 FOMC meeting – leaving policymakers and markets to triangulate from private indicators and Fed speak.

Fed officials, however, aren’t silent. Governor Christopher Waller told CNBC he supports lowering rates but “not aggressively and fast” given conflicting signals: a weakening labor market alongside firm GDP and still-elevated inflation. Waller has repeatedly argued that the recent inflation bump is likely temporary and has emphasized the rising risks from a weakening labor market.

Jobs: Stagnation with few pockets of strength

With BLS updates halted by the shutdown, the freshest official snapshot is August: payrolls +22k, with gains concentrated in health care, retail, transportation/warehousing, and leisure & hospitality. Federal government employment declined and construction has slipped for three straight months, underscoring cyclical vulnerability as the housing pipeline matures. Private-sector trackers also point to a softening labor market.

GDP: Big headline, mechanical tailwinds

Real GDP rose 3.8% SAAR in Q2, a sharp rebound from –0.6% in Q1. But composition matters. BEA attributes the Q2 step-up primarily to a decrease in imports (imports subtract from GDP) and firmer consumer spending, partly offset by a large inventory drawdown. That mix flatters the headline without proving underlying momentum has re-accelerated.

What about all the AI spend? A production-function lens

A clean way to read the quarter is through:

ΔlnY≈ΔlnA+αΔlnK+(1−α)ΔlnL

Here A – total factor productivity (TFP) – is the portion of output growth not explained by measured inputs; it captures technological and organizational efficiency. It’s technological progress that shifts the production frontier—what many hope to see from an AI boom.

The San Francisco Fed’s utilization-adjusted TFP (which strips out “running the same machines and people harder”) shows weak, volatile gains on a four-quarter basis – about 0.24% through Q2 – hardly the signature of a tech-led upswing.

So what powered Q2 if not a TFP surge or a jobs boom? Two things: capital services and utilization. Nonresidential investment showed strength in intellectual-property products (software, R&D, entertainment originals) and equipment – exactly where the AI/data-center wave hits the accounts. Those outlays raise the services capital provides (more/newer servers, software, and machines per worker), boosting output per hour even without a step-up in underlying efficiency. That’s classic capital deepening: higher output per worker with technology held fixed. Likewise, running plants hotter lifts measured productivity but, by design, does not raise utilization-adjusted TFP.

That pattern – faster output per hour with contained cost pressure – is exactly what you’d expect when firms lean on capital deepening and tighter operations rather than a broad TFP acceleration. Indeed, in Q2, nonfarm business labor productivity rose 3.3% SAAR while unit labor costs increased just 1.0% – friendly for margins, consistent with better tools and higher utilization, not proof of a step-change in TFP.

What would a rise in TFP look like?

A genuine TFP upswing would lift potential growth – more output for the same labor and capital – showing up as sustained gains in utilization-adjusted TFP, broader productivity strength across industries, better-behaved unit labor costs (supporting real wages and margins), and less reliance on import compression or inventory arithmetic. It would eventually pull investment and hiring along on improved expected returns.

Conclusion

Take Waller at his word: the recent uptick in inflation is likely temporary, and a cooling labor market is the bigger risk. That argues for cuts – just not fast ones. Q2’s strong headline leaned on import arithmetic, inventory drawdowns, and capital deepening rather than a durable lift in efficiency or broad hiring. Policy should tilt toward easing to cushion slowing growth, but proceed in small, data-dependent steps: cut because labor is softening and the inflation bump looks transitory. Until we see a clearer rise in TFP or a broadening in jobs, the economy rests on a shaky base – despite heavy AI-related capex.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Israel-Hamas peace deal in limbo as clock ticks away on deadline

Israel-Hamas peace deal in limbo as clock ticks away on deadline

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The clock is ticking for Hamas leaders to respond to the 20-point peace agreement proposed by President Donald Trump and approved by Israeli Prime Minister...
Trimming the fat: Trump boasts of shuttering government agencies amid shutdown

Trimming the fat: Trump boasts of shuttering government agencies amid shutdown

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square President Donald Trump has condemned the shutdown and laid the blame squarely at the feet of the “Radical Left Democrats”— in the meantime, he appears...
Trump freezes $18 billion in NYC infrastructure over DEI policies

Trump freezes $18 billion in NYC infrastructure over DEI policies

By Chris WadeThe Center Square The Trump administration is freezing more than $18 billion in federal funding for infrastructure projects in New York City, citing concerns about diversity, equity and...
Illinois quick hits: DHS announces more than 800 illegals arrested; utility prices drop slightly

Illinois quick hits: DHS announces more than 800 illegals arrested; utility prices drop slightly

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Midway Blitz announces 800 illegals arrested According to the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Border...
WATCH: Officials shift shutdown blame; agreed-bill process upended; GOP offers solutions

WATCH: Officials shift shutdown blame; agreed-bill process upended; GOP offers solutions

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop shares reaction to...
Critics: Democrat Senators supporting “Democracy’ amendment would curtail free speech

Critics: Democrat Senators supporting “Democracy’ amendment would curtail free speech

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Every Democrat in the U.S. Senate has backed a constitutional amendment designed to overturn the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election...
LA skyscrapers for homeless could cost federal taxpayers over $1 billion

LA skyscrapers for homeless could cost federal taxpayers over $1 billion

By Kenneth SchruppThe Center Square Federal taxpayers might be on the hook for more than $1 billion over the lifetime of three downtown Los Angeles skyscrapers designed to house the...

Fall 2025 Enrollment Reaches Highest Level in Many Years

Published on September 16, 2025 Lake Land College enrollment for the Fall 2025 semester has reached its highest level in many years, according to the College’s official 10th Day Enrollment Report...
Clark County Logo

Clark County Residents Confront Board Over Solar Project Concerns

Article Summary: Residents raised sharp objections to ongoing solar energy projects during the Clark County Board meeting, demanding more detailed decommissioning plans and protections for local roads. The board was...
Lawyers prepare to sue Trump 'soon' over H-1B changes

Lawyers prepare to sue Trump ‘soon’ over H-1B changes

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Employment immigration lawyers are preparing to sue the Trump administration “soon” over changes to the H-1B visa program. On Sept. 19, President Trump signed a...
First day of government shutdown leaves Wall Street unfazed

First day of government shutdown leaves Wall Street unfazed

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square The first day of the first federal government shutdown in years didn’t seem to disrupt Wall Street, as both the S&P 500 and the Dow...
U.S. Department of Energy buys 5% of Lithium Americas

U.S. Department of Energy buys 5% of Lithium Americas

By Liam HibbertThe Center Square The Center Square) - The U.S. Department of Energy settled government takeover reports of Lithium Americas Corp., announcing a 5% ownership of the $1.5 billion...
Legal group: Student ousted from Zoom for sharing faith

Legal group: Student ousted from Zoom for sharing faith

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square A high school student was muted and kicked off while sharing his faith during a daily “social time” Zoom meeting, violating his First Amendment rights,...
States sue feds over denying grants for illegal immigrants

States sue feds over denying grants for illegal immigrants

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Democratic attorneys general from 21 jurisdictions sued the Trump administration Wednesday for denying federal funds to help victims of violent crimes who are illegal immigrants....
Arizona senator blasts alleged Medicaid fraud at hearing

Arizona senator blasts alleged Medicaid fraud at hearing

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square Arizona state Sen. Carine Werner, R-District 4, continues to investigate billions of dollars of alleged Medicaid fraud. The Arizona Senate Committee on Health & Human...