Everyday Economics: The economy expands, but massive transformation masks weakness

Spread the love

The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is tracking 4.2% real GDP growth in Q4 2025 – a number that screams “strong economy,” powered in part by an AI investment boom and the spending power of wealthier households.

This week’s headline is Friday’s January jobs report. But the setup matters just as much: January auto sales, plus the Institute for Supply Management manufacturing and services surveys, will give us an early read on whether the foundation is weakening at the start of 2026.At the end of 2025, the deterioration in labor-market conditions looked like it had stalled. Job growth was low, but the unemployment rate stopped rising. That “stabilization” is exactly why the Federal Reserve held rates steady at last week’s meeting, emphasizing a labor market that no longer appears to be worsening rapidly – and inflation that remains uncomfortably sticky.But the labor market isn’t healed just because the headline rate stopped climbing.1) “Stabilization” has been helped by participation dynamicsA key reason the unemployment rate hasn’t accelerated is that the labor force hasn’t been expanding as steadily. When fewer people enter (or stay in) the labor force, the unemployment rate can look more stable even if hiring remains weak. That’s why it’s risky to treat a flat unemployment rate as proof the economy has found its footing.The story of the last year has been simple: companies were slow to hire, but also slow to fire. That combination can keep the labor market upright – until it doesn’t.2) Younger workers are the first to get iced out — and the damage compoundsOne reason this expansion still feels K-shaped is that when hiring slows, younger workers lose the “front door” first.Here’s what’s changed since the unemployment rate trough in 2023:Overall unemployment: up 1.0 percentage point (from 3.4% to 4.4%).Teen unemployment (16–19): up 6.3 points (from 9.4% to 15.7%).Unemployment (20–24): up 2.7 points (from 5.5% to 8.2%).That gap matters for the outlook. Younger households tend to spend a larger share of incremental income. When entry-level hiring tightens, consumer spending can cool faster than top-line averages suggest – especially for discretionary categories.It also matters for longer-run productivity. Delayed entry into the labor force delays skill accumulation and early-career learning-by-doing. Even if the economy avoids a downturn, weaker job access today can translate into slower earnings growth and reduced economic growth tomorrow.3) Cost-cutting is becoming the growth strategy – and AI makes it easierThe late-January wave of layoff announcements is a reminder that many businesses are taking matters into their own hands: protecting margins through headcount reductions, re-orgs, and efficiency drives.And here is where the transformation theme becomes unavoidable: modern cost-cutting isn’t just “do more with less.” It increasingly means “replace tasks with software,” and AI lowers the friction to do that – faster, cheaper, and at scale.Importantly, this isn’t only an entry-level story. Evidence increasingly suggests that tasks most exposed to AI are often concentrated in higher-paying, white-collar roles. So while younger workers are being iced out at the margin, AI-enabled restructuring can also put pressure on experienced, higher-income workers – especially in occupations heavy on routine knowledge work.4) The macro risk: profits protected, demand weakenedIf profits are protected by cutting labor costs – while wage income growth and job access weaken – aggregate demand becomes more fragile. That’s one way a K-shaped economy breaks: the spending power of households with higher propensities to consume gets squeezed, while gains accrue disproportionately to capital owners.Over time, rising inequality isn’t just a social story – it can be a growth story, too, by weakening on-the-job investments, social mobility, and the durability of expansions.What I’m watching FridayIf the jobs report shows hiring re-accelerating and unemployment holding steady for the “right” reasons (stronger labor force and job creation), the soft-landing narrative survives.But if we see weaker payrolls and signs that layoffs are spreading across industries, the stabilization narrative could shift quickly.This is the uncomfortable reality of 2026: the economy may look stable on the surface, but it’s navigating a once-in-a-generation transformation in how businesses hire, produce, and cut costs. That’s not a backdrop – it’s the main plot.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Walz appoints members to Operation Metro Surge 'Truth Council'

Walz appoints members to Operation Metro Surge ‘Truth Council’

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has appointed members to a new council tasked with documenting the impacts of Operation Metro Surge and Operation PARRIS, two federal...
$45M included in budget for previously unfunded property tax relief

$45M included in budget for previously unfunded property tax relief

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Included in the recently passed state budget, the Illinois State Board of Education will get money for...
Over one ton of cocaine seized at U.S.-Mexico tunnel bust

Over one ton of cocaine seized at U.S.-Mexico tunnel bust

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Border Patrol agents in Southern California have found another underground cross border tunnel, leading to the arrest of four men and the seizure of enough...
National security group urges Congress to investigate Airwallex ties to CCP

National security group urges Congress to investigate Airwallex ties to CCP

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square A national security group wants Congress to investigate Airwallex over its ties to China. State Armor Chief Executive Officer Michael Lucci sent a letter to...
Open primary system debated as Californians go to polls

Open primary system debated as Californians go to polls

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square Supporters of California’s top-two open primary system are defending it amid challenges and criticism as voters go to the polls Tuesday in the Golden State's...
Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker signs two bills

Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker signs two bills

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed two new laws into effect. House Bill 4154 changes pharmacy licensure provisions...
Elon Poll says 2 in 3 proud to be American and Signers would be disappointed

Elon Poll says 2 in 3 proud to be American and Signers would be disappointed

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Sampling 1,000 adults nationwide ahead of America’s 250th anniversary on July 4, a poll released Tuesday finds 68% are proud to be American and 69%...
U.S. Supreme Court denies Florida request to sue over immigrant CDLs

U.S. Supreme Court denies Florida request to sue over immigrant CDLs

By Michael Carroll | Legal NewslineThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court last week swatted away a request from Florida to sue the states of California and Washington over allegations...
Judge says federal rule blocks Illinois from banning ‘swipe fees’

Judge says federal rule blocks Illinois from banning ‘swipe fees’

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Federal law blocks the state of Illinois from prohibiting both banks from outside Illinois and payment card servicers, like Visa and Mastercard,...
Canadians, Brits stress U.S., Texas are key to shipbuilding

Canadians, Brits stress U.S., Texas are key to shipbuilding

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Canadian and British shipbuilding entrepreneurs on Monday explained why the U.S. and Texas are critical to national defense. The leaders of Davie Defense, Gulf Copper...
Tariff litigation expands as federal court weighs next move

Tariff litigation expands as federal court weighs next move

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Two new businesses have sued to block President Donald Trump's 10% tariffs, even as a federal appeals court considers whether to lift an injunction already...
Democrats dissatisfied by DOJ's pause on 'anti-weaponization fund'

Democrats dissatisfied by DOJ’s pause on ‘anti-weaponization fund’

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Justice is temporarily backing down from its plan to launch a $1.77 billion “anti-weaponization fund” after a federal judge issued a...
Hegseth calls allied defense 'bad deal for taxpayers' in budget push

Hegseth calls allied defense ‘bad deal for taxpayers’ in budget push

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The Pentagon wants the largest nominal military budget in American history despite failing eight consecutive financial audits and continuing to face longstanding financial management challenges....
Pritzker touts state spending to cover federal cuts in passed budget

Pritzker touts state spending to cover federal cuts in passed budget

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Just hours after the state’s General Assembly wrapped its spring session, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker appeared along...
I-95 quintuple fatal: Federal agency subpoenas state of New York

I-95 quintuple fatal: Federal agency subpoenas state of New York

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Failure to willingly cooperate by the state of New York has led to a subpoena for documents related to Jing Dong. The U.S Department of...