Trump's tariffs weakened the economy, so he's lying about the data
Tariffs have descended hard upon American businesses and consumers. Estimates of their downstream effects cluster around a $2,400 cost per family by the end of 2025, dropping to $2,000 a year in 2026 and later years as Americans buy fewer goods. This has led economist Justin Wolfers to quip, "Trump has a pronoun problem. He keeps saying he's imposing tariffs on they/them. But he's actually imposing them on us."
Consumer sentiment has dropped by more than 10 percentage points since President Trump's inauguration day and labor markets have stalled. Help wanted ads nationally dropped by 21% since Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariff announcements and by 27% here in Indiana. The private sector jobs number from ADP shows job growth effectively stopped in April.
These private data tell a rich and consistent story about the economy, but public sector data are more accurate and complete. This requires comment on data integrity and character.
U.S. economic data has been the envy of the world since the Great Depression. It is fast, accurate, nonpartisan and profoundly transparent. It is collected by a group of quiet professionals with input from hundreds of organizations and individuals. These data make the U.S. the most trustworthy and reliable destination for foreign investment.
Trump fired the director of the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Aug. 1 because he didn't like these data. Trump claimed the data were biased against him. That is false. Trump is afraid of facts and likely to become more fearful as more facts emerge — economic or otherwise. He has good reason to be scared on all counts.
The latest federal jobs report indicated that the U.S. economy stalled shortly after tariffs were announced. Overall job creation dropped to near zero and manufacturing employment declined by 33,000 jobs in just three months. Since the tariffs were announced, Indiana lost 2,600 factory jobs — and that is without the most recent month's data, which have not been released.
Factory orders have plummeted to levels not seen since COVID and, before that, the Great Recession. On a scale of self-inflicted economic wounds, this is unparalleled.
Hicks: Indiana's college crisis has nothing to do with woke campuses or high costs
Formally, recessions are determined by the Business Cycle Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research, which uses six indicators. Between March and April — when I first said we had walked into a recession — four of these six turned negative. Only employment and industrial production remained (modestly) positive. By the next data release, both of those indicators will be negative.
Trump inherited an economy that grew at 2.4% last year. Job creation has slowed dramatically under Trump — from over 180,000 monthly jobs under former President Joe Biden in 2024 to just 35,000 since the tariffs began.
If the BLS continues to deliver honest job numbers, we should expect no job growth until 2026 — if then.
Unlike typical recessions, prices are rising due to tariffs, making it harder for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates to help the economy. So, as we move into fall, we should expect accumulating job losses, higher prices and a Fed hesitant to cut rates when the problem is solely that of bad tariffs, not monetary policy.
Trump's criticism of the Fed, like that of the BLS, is at best a transparent effort to deflect blame for the ill effects of his tariff obsession.
Another uncommon aspect of this recession is that it is isolated to the U.S. We did this to ourselves by starting a trade war with the rest of the world. No other countries seem especially interested in crashing their own economies.
Briggs: Steak 'n Shake's MAGA makeover is a desperate bid to save a dying business
This diminishes the attractiveness of the U.S. as a destination for foreign investment. The situation is worsened by the reasonable suspicion that the Trump administration will deliver fictional economic data. Foreign investors may flee, driving up borrowing costs.
So, as the U.S. enters a downturn all alone, with the specter of falsified economic data, we should all expect home mortgages, credit card rates and car loans to be higher in the months and years to come. Capital markets are ruthless towards erratic and bizarre economic policies— and whatever else they might be, Trump's economic policies are erratic and bizarre.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
5 minutes ago
- USA Today
Forget DC. We've got rabbits with tentacles the National Guard needs to fight.
I'm not an expert on pending apocalypses, but I have a hunch that 'rabbits with tentacles' and 'radioactive wasps' might be nature's way of telling us to buckle the (expletive) up. I have a question for our so-called government: Why has the National Guard been sent to Washington, DC, to combat a make-believe crime wave when America is facing a literal invasion of tentacled rabbits and radioactive wasps? An Aug.13 headline right here in USA TODAY read: 'Rabbits with 'tentacles' spotted in Colorado. Are they OK?' No. No, they are not OK, and neither are we, because last time I checked, BUNNIES DON'T HAVE TENTACLES! Rabbits with tentacles and radioactive wasps. What could go wrong? Two weeks ago, CNN had this headline: 'Radioactive wasp nest found at site where US once made nuclear bombs.' Oh. Radioactive wasps, you say? Found near an old nuclear weapons plant? That sounds like a totally normal thing we should ignore. Look, I'm not an expert on pending apocalypses or a proven spotter of signs of the end-times, but I have a hunch that 'rabbits with tentacles' and 'radioactive wasps' might be nature's way of telling us to buckle the (expletive) up. Ignoring our tentacled rabbit crisis, Trump sends National Guard to DC And how is the current administration addressing our pending wasp-ageddon? By not doing a darn thing. The president is apparently too busy dispatching armed soldiers to the nation's capital because a government employee who calls himself Big Balls claims he was beaten up by children. (Google it.) Opinion: Trump ushers in new DC tourist event: 'A Live Re-creation of Authoritarianism!' Life in America is unfolding like a rejected screenplay for a spinoff of 'The Walking Dead,' and I, for one, am not looking forward to death-by-rabbit-tentacle. When the government tells you not to worry about bunnies, worry The Colorado bunnies in question, according to a New York Times report, have 'black spikes growing on their heads, tentacles protruding from their mouths and sluglike growths blocking their eyes.' Totally normal. Totally cool. Colorado Parks and Wildlife spokeswoman Kara Van Hoose said the bunnies have something called cottontail rabbit papillomavirus, which can't spread to humans. What I found notable about that comment is that Van Hoose failed to say whether the infected bunnies can use their mouth tentacles to grab humans by the face before exsanguinating them. That's certainly what I would do if I were a rabbit with mouth tentacles. Please disregard the radioactive wasps. Everything is fine. In South Carolina, near the facility where the radioactive wasps were found, the so-called experts tried to paint a similarly calm portrait of the looming nuclear-wasp crisis. Opinion alerts: Get columns from your favorite columnists + expert analysis on top issues, delivered straight to your device through the USA TODAY app. Don't have the app? Download it for free from your app store. Edwin Deshong, manager of the U.S. Department of Energy's Savannah River Operations Office, told The Times in a statement that his agency is 'managing the discovery of four wasp nests with very low levels of radioactive contamination,' saying the wasps 'do not pose a health risk' to 'the community, or the environment.' That's generally the last thing a person hears before getting murdered by a radioactive wasp. We need our National Guard focused on bunnies and wasps Look, if there's one thing the Trump administration has taught me, it's not to trust the government. So if you think I'm going to read news stories about nuclear-powered wasp menaces and freak rabbits with tentacles and black spikes growing out of their heads and think everything is hunky dory, think again. Opinion: I'm glad Trump is focused on nonexistent DC crime wave, not his campaign promises I believe the government is trying to distract us from our pending annihilation at the hands (paws? stingers?) of bloodthirsty bunnies and wasps by claiming crime in DC is out of control. Don't buy it, folks. We must demand our National Guard troops be sent where they are actually needed. Not to the National Mall or the streets of DC, where the leading crime lately is assault with a foot-long sandwich, but to the ravaged tentacle-bunny lands of Colorado and the toxic wasp swamps of South Carolina. This is serious. At least as serious as what's happening in Washington, DC. Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on Bluesky at @ and on Facebook at You can read diverse opinions from our USA TODAY columnists and other writers on the Opinion front page, on X, formerly Twitter, @usatodayopinion and in our Opinion newsletter.


Buzz Feed
5 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
California Just Gave Their Redistricting Bill A Very Good Name With Very Good Branding
California is getting new election maps. Trump didn't respond, so he started tweeting like him: "DONALD TRUMP, THE LOWEST POLLING PRESIDENT IN RECENT HISTORY, THIS IS YOUR SECOND-TO-LAST WARNING!!! (THE NEXT ONE IS THE LAST ONE!). STAND DOWN NOW OR CALIFORNIA WILL COUNTER-STRIKE (LEGALLY!) TO DESTROY YOUR ILLEGAL CROOKED MAPS IN RED STATES." And ding ding, time ran out. Trump never responded. Today, he announced he would be going through with that redistricting. And now, we've got a name for it. It's the "Election Rigging Response Act." As this person said, "Gavin's 'Election Rigging Response Act' may just be the most beautiful bill name I've ever heard." So, what do you think? Would you vote yes?


New York Post
5 minutes ago
- New York Post
Corey Lewandowski has only worked 69 days under Kristi Noem — with 61 still to go — DHS says after concerns over ‘special' status
WASHINGTON — Corey Lewandowski has logged just 69 days as a 'special' employee of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem — allowing him to serve another 61, the Trump administration said Thursday after weeks of speculation about Lewandowski apparently blowing past the 130-day limit. Lewandowski, 51, has served as Noem's de facto chief of staff since late January, and fellow administration aides were puzzled when he remained on the job well past what they believed to be his end date in early June — leading to theories that he was using colleagues' badges to clock into work. 5 Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's de facto chief of staff Corey Lewandowski has worked just 69 days, DHS says. POOL/AFP via Getty Images 5 Lewandowski's continued presence has drawn intrigue due to the usual 130-day limit on unpaid special employees. James Keivom The Department of Homeland Security told The Post Thursday that 69 working days had been recorded by Trump's former 2016 campaign manager, confirming a figure first reported by Axios. 'Mr. Lewandowski's time is kept by a career DHS employee who submits the paperwork on a bi-weekly basis,' the department said. A White House official hailed plummeting illegal immigration numbers under Noem and Lewandowski's leadership when asked about his status. 5 Noem, left, and Lewandowski, right, participate in immigration raid on April 8 in Phoenix. James Keivom 5 Noem, right, and Lewandowski, center, attend a June 25 meeting in Costa Rica. POOL/AFP via Getty Images 5 Noem and Lewandowski, center-left, attend a June 26 meeting in Guatemala. Getty Images 'The Tremendous results coming from the Department of Homeland Security — a historically secure border, safer American communities, and successful deportations of criminal illegal aliens — speak for themselves,' she said. Lewandowski reportedly was denied the permanent role of DHS chief of staff due to widespread allegations that he and Noem, 53, are having an extramarital affair. Both are married to other people and have repeatedly denied an improper relationship. The pair have traveled extensively together on official business this year, including trips to Argentina, Bahrain, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Poland and Italy.