While the Trump Administration has ignited panic and fears of recession due to its arbitrary, punitive and often outright stupid economic policies, we have yet to see much that indicates the underlying economy has indeed started to retract. Yes, we had 1st Quarter GDP come in at -0.3%, but that was due to
a surge in imports to get ahead of Trump-imposed tariffs, a surge that caused GDP itself to go down by 5%, and inventories to rise (and add to GDP) by more than 2%.
But while we keep getting news of announced layoffs in the federal government and
layoffs starting to be announced in manufacturing as a reaction to the tariffs, we still have not seen much change in US unemployment. And the April jobs report released on Friday indicated that we were still in the same steady job growth trend as Q2 2025 began.
The US economy added a surprisingly strong 177,000 jobs in April, a slight slowdown from March’s downwardly revised 185,000 gains, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Friday. April’s gain was stronger than the average pace of monthly job growth in the prior three months.
Meanwhile, the unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.2%, a historically low level....
April’s jobs report marks another solid month of employment gains and a continuation of a historic expansion of the labor market, but that’s on the backdrop of growing recession fears. And the April jobs report released on Friday indicated that we were still in a job growth trend as Q2 2025 began. It might have downshifted from the big finish to 2024 and start of 2025, but it's in line with what we were doing a year ago, and beating the lower gains we were seeing last Spring and Summer.
As usual, it was health care leading the way in job growth, with just over 50,000 jobs added in April. That takes the overall gains for 2025 in that sector to 195,000, and over 2.1 million Health Care jobs have been added in America since January 2022.
Seems like quite the growth industry. Why would we ever do something stupid like
cut billions in medical research and treatment initiatives? The White House on Friday revealed President Trump’s budget request for fiscal 2026, which includes cutting a quarter of the discretionary funding designated to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)....
The 2026 proposal is seeking to cut $33.3 billion in discretionary funding for HHS, representing a 26.2 percent reduction compared to the fiscal 2025 budget.
This includes a $3.6 billion reduction in discretionary funding for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), an $18 billion reduction for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), a $674 million reduction for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Program Management and a $240 million reduction for Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR) Hospital Preparedness Program.
The only health program that gains discretionary funding in the proposal is HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission, for which the budget provides $500 million.
The budget claims these funds would “allow the Secretary to tackle nutrition, physical activity, healthy lifestyles, over-reliance on medication and treatments, the effects of new technological habits, environmental impacts, and food and drug quality and safety across HHS.”
Hey, why rely on data and invest in the biggest job growth sector in America when we can rely on feelings and quack remedies we
made up to grift money on heard about on the Internet?
Back on the jobs report, UW-Madison's Menzie Chinn looked into the numbers underneath the jobs report, and found some strange items that aren't going to hold up in future months.
What about taking out transportation and warehousing employment, presumably booming relative to what post-tariff levels will be, look to be on a lower trajectory. Taking into account the fact that Federal workers on leave/furloughed and taking buyouts will eventually be counted as not employed suggests a lackluster employment growth rate since January.
The low estimate from CNN is 121K, while the high estimate of Federal government workers on leave, furloughed, fired or took buyouts is 280K. Some portion of the workers are probably not counted as jobs, so the red square is a guess.
Taken literally, using the red square, underlying net job creation is on the order of 100K — rather than 155K — over the last three months.
Those transportation and warehousing jobs went up by 29,000 in April, and include the trucking, rail, and air travel and transport industries. Given the
collapse in foreign travel to the US and the
major falloff in traffic and orders to US ports, you'd think those job gains reverse rather quickly. And as Prof. Chinn notes, at some point soon, we will see the amount of federal government and fed funding-related layoffs hit the jobs numbers full force.
In addition, the jobs numbers of February and March were revised down by a total of 58,000, which means that with the April report, we really were only up 119,000 compared to what was reported before that report. Which makes me wonder why the Wall Street traders have been jumping back into this market in the last 2 weeks, including a
564 point gain in the DOW Jones yesterday. It's like these coked-up fools don't understand that the tariff effects are mostly yet to come, along with the slowdowns in consumer spending, higher prices and possible shortages of some products, and the piling up of inventories in some others.
I'll also note that there is a lot of post-"Liberation (from your wallet) Day" economic data to be released, and if we started to see a consumer reaction as the stock market tanked in the first half of April. Just because the jobs report that reflects how things looked 3 weeks ago didn't have a lot of people newly out of work, it doesn't mean that it's all good and clear for the rest of Q2, or for that matter, 2025.