Commentary: Those job numbers tell us that Trump's economy really stinks

This is read by an automated voice.Please report any issues or inconsistencies here.
What a difference a year makes.Last year at about this time, Elon Musk was boasting that his DOGE team could achieve $2 trillion in federal budget savings by paring down the government workforce.
In November, President Trump announced plans to send $2,000 “tariff dividend checks” to all Americans “(not including high income people!),” he said.During his election campaign, Trump promised to cut gas and home electric bills in half.
Late last year, he was claiming that gasoline prices had fallen below $2 a gallon in some parts of the country; during his recent State of the Union address, he asserted that gas was “below $2.30 a gallon in most states.”The promised handoff from government-adjacent employment to private-sector dynamism never materialized.— Economist Mike Konczal on why the U.S.economy is weakNone of this has come to pass.
What’s worse, the arrows on most charts of U.S.economic activity are pointing down.
The exceptions are the inflation and unemployment rates, which are pointing up — and most of those charts covered a period prior to Trump’s Iran war, which has sent gas prices and consequently inflation soaring.Commentary on economics and more from a Pulitzer Prize winner.By continuing, you agree to our Terms of Service and our Privacy Policy.
The most notable blow to Trump’s narrative of an ever-strengthening economy was delivered by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday, when it reported that nonfarm payrolls had fallen by a startling 92,000 jobs in February.(Economists had expected a modest increase.)Forecasts of U.S.
gross domestic product in the current quarter ending March 31 reflect a high level of economic distress, though they don’t currently point to a recession.The GDPNow forecast of the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank slid to an annual rate of 2.1% after Friday’s jobs report, down from 3.1% as recently as Feb.
20.The New York...