Can low unemployment last under Trump?
For a time, not too long ago, it was the central question animating economic forecasts and bets laid by investors in financial markets: Will the
Now, for many in the business world, that question feels almost passe, part of an earlier, more fretful era of narratives.
After a superlative run of hovering below 4% for more than two years, the unemployment rate - at 4.2% - has ticked up since last spring. But only by a bit so far; the December reading will come Friday. While hiring has slowed, layoffs remain low by long-term standards.
Inflation, having calmed substantially, is still being eyed warily by the
Predictions of a downturn, once omnipresent, were mostly absent from the year-ahead forecasts that major financial firms typically send around to clients over the holidays.
Near the start of 2024,
In the opening days of 2025, conditions appear similar: Even as worst-case-scenario fears of an imminent recession with mass layoffs have largely subsided, anxious recalculations of fresh risks by analysts still abound.
President-elect
Traditionally, streaks of economic growth in America have been subject to relatively predictable sine-wavelike dips: Businesses, after being overly optimistic about conditions, find they may be overextended and pull back on investment and hiring; consumer confidence wanes as finding work gets harder; then, overall spending and production decrease while bankruptcies and unemployment spike. Finally, after debts are squared, sentiment turns brighter, and lending and spending recover, bringing about a new cycle.
But the last time that such a textbook undulation happened was the expansion from 2002 to 2007, which ended in the economic carnage of the financial crisis. Since 2009, the
And it was not clear as this decade began that the economy was in immediate danger. In
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