Everyday Economics: Government shutdown clouds economic picture

Spread the love

(The Center Square ) – As Washington remains gridlocked, Americans face more than political theater – they’re losing access to critical economic information. The government shutdown has halted the release of key data that Federal Reserve officials use to guide interest rate decisions and that businesses rely on for planning. This information vacuum comes at a particularly bad time, as warning signs were already flashing in the labor market.

1. What is a Government Shutdown?

A government shutdown occurs when Congress fails to pass funding legislation to keep federal agencies operating. Without approved budgets, “non-essential” government services stop, federal employees are furloughed or work without pay, and many government functions – including the publication of economic statistics – grind to a halt.

Key agencies affected include the Bureau of Labor Statistics (which publishes productivity, jobs and inflation reports), the Census Bureau (which releases retail sales and construction data), and the Bureau of Economic Analysis (which reports GDP figures). During a shutdown, these agencies cannot collect, process, or release the economic data that markets, policymakers and the public depend on.

2. Economic Impact of a Prolonged Shutdown

Immediate Effects:

Airport chaos: Long lines at airports, air traffic control disruptions, and lost tourism activity.Data darkness: The Fed and markets lose real-time economic visibility, increasing uncertainty,Federal worker pay delays: Employees go unpaid during the shutdown but receive back pay once it ends.

If It Drags On:

Permanent income loss: Unlike federal employees, government contractors historically don’t receive back pay. This income loss puts financial stress on households and permanently reduces consumer spending.GDP drag: Each week of shutdown shaves 0.1-0.2 percentage points off quarterly GDP growthFed paralysis: Without reliable data, the central bank struggles to calibrate monetary policy appropriately

The 2018-2019 shutdown (35 days) reduced GDP by an estimated $3 billion according to the Congressional Budget Office. A longer shutdown amplifies these effects.

3. The Labor Market Was Already Weakening

Here’s the concerning part: even before the shutdown obscured official data, private sector indicators were signaling clear deterioration.

The Job Posting Collapse

Indeed’s data reveals a sharp pullback in hiring appetite. Job postings fell 2.5% month-over-month and sit 8.9% below year-ago levels. This isn’t noise – it’s a trend. Companies are pumping the brakes on hiring and expansion.

Wage growth tells the same story. Indeed’s measure has cooled to just 2.6% year-over-year, down from 3.4% at the start of the year. When employers stop hiring workers, slack builds in the labor market, wage growth slows and households’ real purchasing power declines.

LinkedIn’s data confirms the pattern: job postings down roughly 12% year-over-year. Meanwhile, workers are staying put – quit rates continue declining as employees recognize fewer opportunities exist elsewhere.

The Housing Connection

This labor market weakness is evident in housing. The primary reason Americans move is employment – new jobs drive relocation. As job opportunities evaporate, mobility freezes, particularly among renters who are most responsive to employment shifts.

The result? Rental vacancy rates remain elevated as landlords and property managers struggle. In August, a record 36.7% of Zillow rental listings offered concessions – the highest share on record. When more than one-third of landlords feel compelled to offer deals, it signals genuine distress among housing providers and validates the broader labor market concerns.

At the same time, the construction sector faces its own reckoning – as builders finish ongoing projects, construction employment is expected to take a plunge.

What the Government Shutdown Means for the Federal Reserve

This week, several Federal Reserve officials will speak and discuss their outlook for the U.S. economy. The Fed will also release the minutes of the September FOMC meeting. Without official government jobs and inflation data, expect most Fed officials to sound more cautious about the state of the economy.

Bottom Line

The government shutdown compounds an already challenging economic picture. The Fed is flying blind at exactly the moment when private data suggests the labor market is softening faster than anticipated. The combination of weakening employment, cooling wages, and stressed housing markets suggests the economy entered a more vulnerable phase even before the data lights went out.

The question isn’t whether the economy is slowing – private indicators have answered that. The question is how much slack is building while no one in Washington can see the official scoreboard.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

‘Code and Country’ report urges stronger U.S. response to China’s AI ambitions

‘Code and Country’ report urges stronger U.S. response to China’s AI ambitions

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square China’s pursuit of artificial intelligence supremacy poses one of the greatest strategic threats in history, a new report from the Center for Security Policy warns....
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Casey City Council for November 03, 2025

Casey City Council Meeting | November 03, 2025 The Casey City Council addressed property blight, approved major financial items, and moved forward on key city projects during its first meeting...
Light at the end of the government shutdown tunnel

Light at the end of the government shutdown tunnel

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square U.S. Senate Republicans have offered Democrats a face-saving way out of the government shutdown: in exchange for support to reopen the government, Republicans will guarantee...
Everyday Economics: Is AI to blame for the layoffs – or a late-cycle hangover?

Everyday Economics: Is AI to blame for the layoffs – or a late-cycle hangover?

By Orphe DivounguyThe Center Square (THE Center Square) – U.S. employers announced 153,074 job cuts in October – the worst October since 2003 – and headlines rushed to blame AI....
Deal close in U.S. Senate to reopen government

Deal close in U.S. Senate to reopen government

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square A deal is close to being struck in the U.S. Senate to resume funding the federal government, indicating the end of the shutdown is close....
DMV small businesses also bear brunt of Congress’ budget brawl

DMV small businesses also bear brunt of Congress’ budget brawl

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square As Congress convenes for a rare Sunday session amid the ongoing shutdown, the capital region’s small business owners wait with baited breath. Besides federal workers,...
Legal experts split over state, federal immigration control

Legal experts split over state, federal immigration control

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The second Trump administration has been largely defined by strict immigration enforcement and net zero illegal border crossings. Amid the enforcement, legal policy analysts are...
Thousands of flights delayed, cancelled as shutdown rocks airports

Thousands of flights delayed, cancelled as shutdown rocks airports

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square More than 1,400 flights within, into or out of the U.S. were cancelled Sunday and more than 3,300 were delayed as staffing levels at airports...
Trump: Americans to receive $2,000 each from tariff revenue

Trump: Americans to receive $2,000 each from tariff revenue

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square President Donald Trump on Sunday said every American with the exception of the wealthy will receive $2,000 from the revenue the U.S. has collected from...
Casey Council Meeting Graphic.2

City Hall Remodel Plans Move Forward for Public Bidding

Casey City Council Meeting | November 03, 2025 Article SummaryPlans to remodel the front office of Casey City Hall are advancing after the City Hall Committee finalized a new design....
Taxpayer costs rise as U.S. mounts pressure campaign against Venezuela

Taxpayer costs rise as U.S. mounts pressure campaign against Venezuela

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump's plans for Venezuela could cost U.S. taxpayers more each day as the military's most expensive aircraft carrier arrives. The president says the...
Large naval presence in Caribbean ahead of Ford arrival

Large naval presence in Caribbean ahead of Ford arrival

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square As the number of suspected narcotic transport boats destroyed by the U.S. military grows, so does the number of naval vessels in the Caribbean. Secretary...
Voting rights group warns CA redistricting push could undermine trust in IL

Voting rights group warns CA redistricting push could undermine trust in IL

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (THE CENTer Square) – California Gov. Gavin Newsom is urging states like Illinois to redraw congressional maps, but voting rights...
Chicago downtown office space vacancy rate jumps to record high levels

Chicago downtown office space vacancy rate jumps to record high levels

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – With Chicago’s downtown office vacancy rate now at a record-high 28%, Illinois Policy Institute researcher LyLena...
Screenshot 2025-11-06 at 7.53.07 AM

Casey’s Comprehensive Plan Nears Completion, Public Hearing Set

Casey City Council Meeting | November 03, 2025 Article SummaryThe City of Casey's comprehensive plan update is nearly finalized following a second open house, with a public hearing scheduled for...