The US economy seems strong after a year of Trump, but is it really? | Donald Trump News

Over the past year, United States President Donald Trump has unleashed a slew of policies that have upended businesses, supply chains and jobs.

Yet the US economy seems to be growing at a healthy clip, and the unemployment rate is in a safe zone.

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

The reality, experts say, is that the stock market boom has helped to mask deeper underlying problems in the economy.

Since taking office, Trump has imposed a range of tariffs on countries, including key trading partners, leading to predictions of inflation skyrocketing, manufacturing screeching to a halt and unemployment soaring.

None of those scenarios came true.

Inflation, while above the Federal Reserve’s target, was a modest 2.7 percent in December.

The unemployment rate was relatively low, at 4.4 percent, last month. Gross domestic product (GDP) grew at 4.3 percent in the third quarter of 2025, the fastest in two years.

“The shock and awe we anticipated just didn’t materialise,” Bernard Yaros, lead US economist at Oxford Economics, told Al Jazeera.

Yaros said the limited fallout could be attributed to the relative lack of retaliation by other countries and the stock market rally that quickly followed Trump’s dialling back of the steepest tariffs announced on “liberation day“.

Since Trump’s April 2 announcement, the stock market, which is heavily weighted towards the “magnificent seven” tech companies, has risen nearly 30 percent, boosting Americans’ paper wealth and encouraging households to loosen their purse strings.

Gains in net wealth have driven almost one-third of the rise in consumer spending since the COVID-19 pandemic, Oxford Economics said in a research briefing in October.

At the same time, the gains have not been distributed evenly.

The top 10 percent of earners are now estimated to account for roughly half of all spending, the highest proportion since officials began compiling data in 1989, according to Moody’s Analytics.

“The gains are going a lot to people in higher income brackets – they are the ones who have the stock portfolios – and are going to people in sectors and occupations tied to AI,” Marcus Noland, executive vice president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told Al Jazeera.

“But, these numbers mask the unevenness in the growth in this economy.”

Net decline of workers

A careful parsing of the data reveals that unevenness. For instance, despite the impressive GDP numbers, that growth is not being accompanied by an increase in hiring.

While hospitality and healthcare added workers last year, retail, manufacturing and construction – sectors that rely heavily on migrants – all shed jobs.

As a result of the Trump administration’s mass deportation of undocumented immigrants and tightening of legal migration pathways, the US last year experienced negative net migration for the first time in at least half a century, according to a Brookings Institution analysis.

“And through this very public and brutal way of going about deportations, they have discouraged illegal immigration, but also intimidated immigrants in the US,” Noland said, adding that the US workforce is projected to see a net decline of two million workers this year.

The “bifurcation” in the US economy is also being felt across the business world, with smaller companies lacking the deep pockets to stockpile inventories or negotiate with suppliers in the face of increased tariffs.

“The surge in policy uncertainty this year has had an outsize effect on smaller firms,” Oxford Economics said in a November report.

These firms are also seeing little benefit from the boom in the artificial intelligence (AI) industry since revenues have been driven by capital-intensive chip manufacturing and cloud services.

While AI proponents believe the world is on the cusp of huge gains in productivity that could dramatically raise living standards, there are concerns about large numbers of people being put out of work.

“This could be the new norm – jobless growth. That’s one reason people are not feeling so great,” Yaros said.

“While a lot of hype about AI and productivity benefits from AI are still to come, we think that is a risk to the labour market if it continues to hold back hiring.”

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Trump’s war with Iran complicates economic pivot GOP badly wants to see from him

Hebron, Kentucky  —  President Donald Trump was touring a pharmaceutical company in Ohio Wednesday — trying again to turn attention to his domestic achievements — when talk again returned to the restive Middle East. Was the conflagration a war, a reporter asked, or merely an “excursion,” as the president had just described it. “Well, it’s

Could the boxer turn politician?

March 11, 2026, 8:29 p.m. ET Former President Donald Trump predicted that social media influencer Jake Paul will run for political office. Paul has a history of celebrity boxing matches and co-founded a successful promotions company. President Donald Trump has presented another opportunity to fact-check his public statements. With the war on Iran raging and

Trump launches next phase of trade war with new investigations

The Trump administration announced Wednesday that it will launch a wave of tariff-related investigations into more than a dozen U.S. trade partners, the next phase in President Donald Trump’s sweeping global trade wars. In a process that is likely to result in a fresh round of tariffs in the near future, the Office of U.S.

South Africa summons new US ambassador over ‘undiplomatic remarks’ | Donald Trump News

South Africa’s government has summoned the United States ambassador to the country to discuss his “undiplomatic remarks”, a sign of the deepening rift between Pretoria and Washington. Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola announced that Ambassador Leo Brent Bozell III had been summoned Wednesday, following a series of comments from the envoy, who took his post last

Smartmatic says Trump’s ‘campaign of retribution’ is driving criminal prosecution

MIAMI (AP) — Voting technology firm Smartmatic is seeking to dismiss a criminal indictment for money laundering, blaming President Donald Trump and his allies for seeking its prosecution as part of a “campaign of retribution” against those they blame for his 2020 election loss. Smartmatic’s parent company, UK-based SGO Corporation, was added to a criminal

Trump asks Supreme Court to let protections for Haitians expire

President Donald Trump urged the Supreme Court on Wednesday to let his administration end temporary immigration protections for some 350,000 Haitians who have lived in the US legally for years, escalating another fast-moving fight over immigration to the nation’s highest court. The appeal followed a scathing ruling from a federal district court in Washington, DC,

Donald Trump’s granddaughter made people mad online. They’re missing the point.

Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. There’s a lot to complain about when it comes to the president’s granddaughter’s morally repugnant video diary of her Secret Service–chaperoned trip to a luxury supermarket, and I’ve been pleased to see that the

What is Donald Trump’s approval rating? Polls show Iran controversial

March 11, 2026, 10:27 a.m. ET Recent polls show more voters disapprove of President Trump’s handling of the war in Iran than approve. Trump’s overall job approval rating remains underwater, according to several recent polls and polling averages. With U.S. military action more than a week underway in Iran, polls are beginning to emerge on

Dree Hemingway of ‘Love Story’ sent JFK Jr.’s ex Daryl Hannah a note

March 11, 2026, 8:31 a.m. ET “Love Story” star Dree Hemingway didn’t want to upset Daryl Hannah. The actress, 38, who portrays Hannah in a buzzy FX series chronicling the life and death of John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, revealed in a new interview that she wrote her a note before filming.

Best SXSW celebrity sightings in Austin over the years

Bill Murray surprises fest-goers in at Longhorn Caverns in the 2008 edition of Fantastic Fest Provided by Fons PR /Jack Plunkett/FRE Celebrities: They’re just like us — especially during South by Southwest. For a few magical weeks every March, Austin turns into a pop culture collision zone. Actors duck into dive bars between premieres, musicians

William Shatner Says He Turned $42 From Musk Into $200K for Charity

William Shatner says he’s had a “tentative relationship” with Elon Musk over the years. “Barely reaching the R in relationship,” he told Business Insider in a recent interview. But last month, he said Musk sent him $42 through X Money, the payments product being tested inside the X app, helping Shatner eventually raise nearly $200,000

Actors and Celebrities Get Into the Non-Alcoholic Beer Biz – American Craft Beer

(Tom Holland / Courtesy BERO) Not long ago, non-alcoholic beer was treated like the awkward cousin of the beer world — something you drank if you had to, not because you wanted to. But times have changed. With better brewing techniques and a growing interest in healthier lifestyles, the NA beer category has exploded in

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x