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

WATCH: Trump acknowledges Iranian hardliners could jeopardize deal

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Still hopeful the U.S. and Iran can strike a deal on its nuclear program, President Donald Trump acknowledged Wednesday that the volatility inside Iran, not...
Advocates applaud, condemn SPLC wire fraud charges

Advocates applaud, condemn SPLC wire fraud charges

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Lawmakers and political action groups simultaneously applauded and condemned the U.S. Department of Justice’s new superseding indictment from a grand jury against the Southern Poverty...
Gallagher elected to serve rest of LaMalfa's term in Congress

Gallagher elected to serve rest of LaMalfa’s term in Congress

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California Assemblymember James Gallagher, R-East Nicolaus, has been elected to serve the rest of the late Republican U.S. Rep. Doug LaMalfa's current term. Gallagher is...
Four House Republicans rebel against Trump, help pass War Powers Resolution

Four House Republicans rebel against Trump, help pass War Powers Resolution

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square In the second congressional rebuke of the Trump administration's mission against Iran, the U.S. House passed a War Powers Resolution when four Republicans joined Democrats...
Hilton, Becerra remain ahead in California gubernatorial race

Hilton, Becerra remain ahead in California gubernatorial race

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square It still appears that Steve Hilton and Xavier Becerra will advance out of the June 2 primary and into the Nov. 3 general election for...
Budget math undercuts Bessent's deficit reduction pledge

Budget math undercuts Bessent’s deficit reduction pledge

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump's next budget projects federal deficits running more than double Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's stated target through at least 2029 while also calling...
State Police, IDOT break ground on $14M training facility

State Police, IDOT break ground on $14M training facility

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois State Police and the Illinois Department of Transportation broke ground on a joint venture to...
Republican data privacy bill scrutinized in congressional hearing

Republican data privacy bill scrutinized in congressional hearing

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Businesses and online privacy advocates hold diametrically opposing views on the wisdom of congressional Republicans’ plans to enact a nationwide framework for consumer data privacy...
World Cup: Economic impact equation includes displaced regular tourism

World Cup: Economic impact equation includes displaced regular tourism

By Kim JarrettThe Center Square Putting a dollar figure on the economic impact of the FIFA World Cup games scheduled for Atlanta is not an exact science, economists say. Eight...
Illinois Quick Hits: Johnson says comptroller running is 'no breaking news'

Illinois Quick Hits: Johnson says comptroller running is ‘no breaking news’

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says it’s no breaking news that Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza is running for...
Trump targets 60 economies with forced labor tariffs

Trump targets 60 economies with forced labor tariffs

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The U.S. Trade Representative proposed tariffs of 10% to 12.5% on imports from 60 economies, including Canada, Mexico, Japan and the European Union, arguing that...
Lawmakers probe $1.2B Ohio Medicaid fraud

Lawmakers probe $1.2B Ohio Medicaid fraud

By Christine Johnson and Andrew RiceThe Center Square Federal lawmakers called for greater fraud enforcement in the Medicaid Waiver Program on Wednesday, citing concerns over recent reports of $1.2 billion...
Debt burden, pensions burden Chicago Public Schools

Debt burden, pensions burden Chicago Public Schools

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The author of a new Civic Federation report says taking on more debt would be a death...
Nearly 100,000 Illinois Uber, Lyft drivers may soon be able to unionize

Nearly 100,000 Illinois Uber, Lyft drivers may soon be able to unionize

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A proposal that would allow many Uber and Lyft drivers to form a sector-wide union and engage...
Michigan lawmakers spar over Rx Kids program amid oversight concerns

Michigan lawmakers spar over Rx Kids program amid oversight concerns

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Michigan lawmakers are sparring over the future of the state's Rx Kids program, a cash-assistance initiative that has received more than $300 million in taxpayer...