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

Former Vice President Dick Cheney dies

Former Vice President Dick Cheney dies

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Dick Cheney, vice president to former President George W. Bush, has died. He was 84. His family was with him Monday evening and said the...
Illinois quick hits: Ceremonies planned for new lawyers; energy efficiency grants announced

Illinois quick hits: Ceremonies planned for new lawyers; energy efficiency grants announced

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Ceremonies planned for new lawyers Bar admission ceremonies are scheduled across the state Wednesday for the 1,637 people who passed the...
26 states participate in federal SAVE program to ensure only US citizens are voting

26 states participate in federal SAVE program to ensure only US citizens are voting

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square In less than a few months, 26 states have begun working with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to ensure only U.S. citizens are voting...
Key races across U.S., redistricting at stake as voters head to polls Tuesday

Key races across U.S., redistricting at stake as voters head to polls Tuesday

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Governor’s races, city mayoral campaigns and redistricting initiatives will bring voters to the polls on Tuesday for a consequential off-year Election Day. Elections in California,...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Casey Township Library Board of Trustees for October 2, 2025

Casey Township Library Board of Trustees Meeting | October 2, 2025 The Casey Township Library Board made a key financial decision at its meeting on Thursday, October 2, 2025, voting...
Nigeria leaders deny Christian genocide, UN attributes violence to 'climate change'

Nigeria leaders deny Christian genocide, UN attributes violence to ‘climate change’

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Nigerian leaders continue to deny that Christian genocide has been occurring for years as the United Nation has attributed the violence to “climate change.” Over...
Congressional Perks: House members, staff get daycare, on-call doctor

Congressional Perks: House members, staff get daycare, on-call doctor

By Arthur KaneThe Center Square Job perks like an on-call doctor, on-site daycare and millions of dollars for food, beverages and bottled water sound like something offered to employees of...
California leaders hope for high voter turnout for Prop. 50

California leaders hope for high voter turnout for Prop. 50

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square With only one day to go in California before Election Day, legislators expect to see a relatively high voter turnout for the Golden State’s congressional...
Voters to decide two statewide measures, nearly 100 local proposals

Voters to decide two statewide measures, nearly 100 local proposals

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square As Colorado voters prepare for Election Day, they will vote on two statewide ballot measures and nearly 100 local measures across 30 counties. Those measures...
WATCH: Coalition sues to protect student loan forgiveness

WATCH: Coalition sues to protect student loan forgiveness

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Democratic attorney generals from 22 jurisdictions sued the U.S. Department of Education Monday over its new rule limiting Public Student Loan Forgiveness for government and...
WATCH: California attorney general talks about Prop. 50

WATCH: California attorney general talks about Prop. 50

By Dave MasonThe Center Square California has nothing to hide. That’s Attorney General Rob Bonta’s response to The Center Square’s question about the U.S. Department of Justice assigning monitors to...
Illinois quick hits: Man charged with threatening Trump; judge grants injunction in shelter funding case

Illinois quick hits: Man charged with threatening Trump; judge grants injunction in shelter funding case

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Man charged with threatening Trump For the second time in less than a week, a person from Illinois has been charged...

WATCH: IL GOP Rep: Sanctuary expansion bill may expose many to civil lawsuits

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois House and Senate leaders are touting legislation they say will protect people from federal immigration enforcement,...
Senators introduce legislation to codify Antifa terror designation

Senators introduce legislation to codify Antifa terror designation

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square More than a month after President Donald Trump designated Antifa a domestic terror organization, a group of senators is proposing legislation to codify the president’s...
DHS proposes billion dollar expanded DNA testing for immigrants

DHS proposes billion dollar expanded DNA testing for immigrants

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Homeland Security issued a multibillion dollar proposal on Monday to increase biometric scanning during the immigration process. The proposal would expand...