
US ‘on precipice' of recession – Moody's chief analyst
The warning followed a Bureau of Labor Statistics report showing the US added an average of just 35,000 jobs a month from May to July – less than a third of last year's pace and the weakest since 2020. Experts say the slowdown signals weakening economic growth. Other indicators have also been bleak: June consumer spending rose only 0.1% after inflation, prices climbed 2.7% year-on-year – the highest since February – and factory activity contracted for the fourth straight month as orders and jobs fell.
'The economy is on the precipice of recession. That's the clear takeaway from last week's economic data dump,' Zandi wrote on X on Sunday. 'Consumer spending has flatlined, construction and manufacturing are contracting, and employment is set to fall.'
He warned that inflation above target leaves the Federal Reserve little room to revive growth, especially under Trump's policies.
'It's no mystery why the economy is struggling; blame increasing US tariffs and highly restrictive immigration policy,' Zandi stated. 'The tariffs are cutting increasingly deeply into the profits of American companies and the purchasing power of American households. Fewer immigrant workers means a smaller economy.'
Since returning to office, Trump has tightened restrictions on illegal immigration, planning to deport 4 million people over four years – a move many warn will trigger severe labor shortages. He has also imposed tariffs on hundreds of US trade partners, framing them as a 'reciprocal' strategy to secure better trade terms, protect jobs, revive manufacturing, cut deficits, and fund tax relief.
Zandi is not alone in warning of the risks. Fed Chair Jerome Powell has cautioned that tariffs could sharply raise both inflation and unemployment. The Economic Policy Institute estimated that Trump's mass deportations plan could destroy nearly 6 million jobs. Trump's alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, warned that deportations would shrink most worker paychecks, cut GDP, and further swell the already massive federal budget deficit.
Hashtags

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


Russia Today
8 minutes ago
- Russia Today
‘We don't want to keep Gaza'
Israel does not intend to establish its own governing body in Gaza after its military campaign against Hamas concludes and would rather see Arab neighbors assume responsibility for the Palestinian enclave, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has stated. In an interview with Fox News on Thursday, Netanyahu was asked whether Israel would take control of the entire Gaza Strip. He responded: 'We intend to, in order to ensure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza [Hamas] and to pass it to civilian governance that is not Hamas and not anyone advocating the destruction of Israel.' Netanyahu insisted that Israel doesn't 'want to keep it [Gaza],' but rather 'have a security perimeter.'The prime minister added that 'we don't want to be there as a governing body, we want to hand it over to Arab forces that will govern it properly.' Israel controlled Gaza from 1967 until its unilateral withdrawal in 2005. Earlier this month, several Israeli media outlets reported that Netanyahu had told ministers he would seek cabinet backing for a plan to fully occupy Gaza, despite objections from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). The Jewish state and the militant group agreed to a fragile three-stage ceasefire in January, only for Israel to resume military action in March amid mutual recriminations with Hamas. Since then, the two belligerents have sporadically engaged in talks, which have failed to yield any breakthrough. In February, US President Donald Trump proposed a plan envisioning the relocation of the Gaza population to neighboring states of 'great wealth.' A group of Arab nations rejected the proposal shortly thereafter, as did Russia. The conflict between Hamas and Israel broke out in October of 2023 after a surprise attack by Hamas in southern Israel left about 1,200 people dead and 250 taken hostage. According to Gaza's Hamas-controlled Health Ministry, the Israeli military campaign has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians. The UN, multiple humanitarian organizations, and several European governments have accused Israel of indiscriminately striking residential areas and preventing humanitarian aid from reaching the enclave's population.


Russia Today
8 minutes ago
- Russia Today
Lula and Modi push back against US tariffs
The leaders of Brazil and India have reaffirmed their support for multilateralism and fair trade in response to sweeping US tariffs, according to a statement by the Brazilian government. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva held a one-hour phone call with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday to discuss the global economic outlook and rising trade tensions. Both leaders reaffirmed the importance of 'defending multilateralism and the need to confront current global challenges,' while exploring deeper integration between the two nations, the statement said. The talks came after US President Donald Trump imposed a 50% tariff on Brazilian goods on July 30, citing the prosecution of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who is facing trial for allegedly plotting a coup following his 2022 election defeat. Trump accused Brasilia of political persecution and called the BRICS nation a threat to US national security. Brazil condemned the move as an illegal attempt to interfere in its internal affairs. China backed Brazil, denouncing what it called 'bullying' by the US. On Wednesday, Trump announced a 50% tariff on Indian imports effective late August, citing the country's oil trade with Russia. New Delhi slammed the move as 'unfair, unjustified and unreasonable,' and vowed to defend its national interests. Trump has repeatedly accused BRICS members of trying to undermine the US dollar and has threatened additional 10% tariffs. The economic group has rejected the claim and argued that Washington's own foreign policy undermines the greenback. BRICS, which was formed by Brazil, Russia, India, and China in 2006, with South Africa joining four years later, has since expanded and now surpasses the G7 in combined GDP. Trump has also threatened broader tariffs on Russia's trade partners to pressure Moscow into accepting a ceasefire in the Ukraine conflict. Moscow has rebuffed the threats, saying that sovereign nations are free to choose their own trade partners. Lula told Reuters this week that he plans to propose a BRICS summit to coordinate a joint response to Washington's trade pressure.


Russia Today
an hour ago
- Russia Today
Trump's sweeping new tariffs take effect
President Donald Trump's new country-specific tariffs came into effect at midnight on Thursday, targeting nearly 70 US trade partners. Initially announced by the White House last week, the new duties range from 10% to 41%. The new rates are part of Trump's broader tariff campaign launched in April, when he accused other countries of unfair trade imbalances. He has framed the measures as a 'reciprocal' response to secure better trade terms. After a 90-day pause introduced a week later and a four-week delay announced in July, Trump last week confirmed the new rates will become effective on August 7. While some countries now face lower duties than were threatened in April – Madagascar's dropped from 47% to 15% – others saw increases. Switzerland's rate rose from 31% to 39%. Syria faces the highest new rate at 41%, followed by Myanmar and Laos at 40%, Iraq at 35%, and South Africa at 30%. The UK and Brazil were hit with 10%, though an earlier Trump order imposed 40% on select Brazilian goods in retaliation for alleged 'serious human rights abuses.' India is being levied at 25%, and Taiwan at 20%. Trump announced the measures on Truth Social just before they took effect: 'Reciprocal tariffs take effect at midnight tonight! Billions of dollars, mostly from countries that have taken advantage of the United States for years, laughing all the way, will start flowing into the USA.' Countries that reached trade deals with Washington since April – including the EU, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Cambodia, South Korea, Pakistan, and the Philippines – received adjusted terms. Others are still negotiating: Mexico kept its 25% rate after securing a 90-day extension, while China faces a 30% tariff as talks continue ahead of its August 12 deadline. While Russia has not been hit with tariffs due to the sweeping sanctions on the country that already exist, Trump earlier warned he may impose more duties on its trade partners if the Ukraine conflict is not resolved by August 8. On Wednesday, he threatened to double India's tariffs to 50% by late August, accusing it of aiding Moscow by purchasing Russian oil, and hinted at fresh tariffs on China.