Everyday Economics: Data blackout: Why the growth narrative doesn't hold up

Everyday Economics: Data blackout: Why the growth narrative doesn’t hold up

Spread the love

The federal shutdown has darkened the dashboard. Key September releases are delayed – most notably CPI now slated for Oct. 24, just days before the Oct. 28–29 FOMC meeting – leaving policymakers and markets to triangulate from private indicators and Fed speak.

Fed officials, however, aren’t silent. Governor Christopher Waller told CNBC he supports lowering rates but “not aggressively and fast” given conflicting signals: a weakening labor market alongside firm GDP and still-elevated inflation. Waller has repeatedly argued that the recent inflation bump is likely temporary and has emphasized the rising risks from a weakening labor market.

Jobs: Stagnation with few pockets of strength

With BLS updates halted by the shutdown, the freshest official snapshot is August: payrolls +22k, with gains concentrated in health care, retail, transportation/warehousing, and leisure & hospitality. Federal government employment declined and construction has slipped for three straight months, underscoring cyclical vulnerability as the housing pipeline matures. Private-sector trackers also point to a softening labor market.

GDP: Big headline, mechanical tailwinds

Real GDP rose 3.8% SAAR in Q2, a sharp rebound from –0.6% in Q1. But composition matters. BEA attributes the Q2 step-up primarily to a decrease in imports (imports subtract from GDP) and firmer consumer spending, partly offset by a large inventory drawdown. That mix flatters the headline without proving underlying momentum has re-accelerated.

What about all the AI spend? A production-function lens

A clean way to read the quarter is through:

ΔlnY≈ΔlnA+αΔlnK+(1−α)ΔlnL

Here A – total factor productivity (TFP) – is the portion of output growth not explained by measured inputs; it captures technological and organizational efficiency. It’s technological progress that shifts the production frontier—what many hope to see from an AI boom.

The San Francisco Fed’s utilization-adjusted TFP (which strips out “running the same machines and people harder”) shows weak, volatile gains on a four-quarter basis – about 0.24% through Q2 – hardly the signature of a tech-led upswing.

So what powered Q2 if not a TFP surge or a jobs boom? Two things: capital services and utilization. Nonresidential investment showed strength in intellectual-property products (software, R&D, entertainment originals) and equipment – exactly where the AI/data-center wave hits the accounts. Those outlays raise the services capital provides (more/newer servers, software, and machines per worker), boosting output per hour even without a step-up in underlying efficiency. That’s classic capital deepening: higher output per worker with technology held fixed. Likewise, running plants hotter lifts measured productivity but, by design, does not raise utilization-adjusted TFP.

That pattern – faster output per hour with contained cost pressure – is exactly what you’d expect when firms lean on capital deepening and tighter operations rather than a broad TFP acceleration. Indeed, in Q2, nonfarm business labor productivity rose 3.3% SAAR while unit labor costs increased just 1.0% – friendly for margins, consistent with better tools and higher utilization, not proof of a step-change in TFP.

What would a rise in TFP look like?

A genuine TFP upswing would lift potential growth – more output for the same labor and capital – showing up as sustained gains in utilization-adjusted TFP, broader productivity strength across industries, better-behaved unit labor costs (supporting real wages and margins), and less reliance on import compression or inventory arithmetic. It would eventually pull investment and hiring along on improved expected returns.

Conclusion

Take Waller at his word: the recent uptick in inflation is likely temporary, and a cooling labor market is the bigger risk. That argues for cuts – just not fast ones. Q2’s strong headline leaned on import arithmetic, inventory drawdowns, and capital deepening rather than a durable lift in efficiency or broad hiring. Policy should tilt toward easing to cushion slowing growth, but proceed in small, data-dependent steps: cut because labor is softening and the inflation bump looks transitory. Until we see a clearer rise in TFP or a broadening in jobs, the economy rests on a shaky base – despite heavy AI-related capex.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

NL Fire

New Lenox Firefighters Extinguish Garage Fire, Rescue Pets on Somerset Court

Article Summary: The New Lenox Fire Protection District quickly contained a Friday morning garage fire on Somerset Court, preventing the blaze from spreading to the home's main living area and...
WCO-Capital Improvements & IT Apr 07 214

Will County Explores Multi-Million Dollar Downtown Joliet Consolidation and City Partnership

Will County Capital Improvements & IT Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Capital Improvements and IT Committee reviewed four sweeping architectural options to consolidate county...
will county board meeting.6

Will County Partners with LNS Development for Laraway Road Drainage Improvements in New Lenox

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The county approved a cost-sharing agreement with a private developer to build shared stormwater management facilities...
Will County Board Graphic.03

Will County Hires LEAP HR Consulting for $12,000 Strategic Plan

Will County Board Meeting | March 19, 2026 Article Summary: Seeking to unify its vision and improve onboarding for new members, the Will County Board will launch a four-month strategic...
Will County Finance Logo

Will County Finalizes 2025 Tax Levy at $159.5 Million, Limiting Rate Drops

Briefs: Will County Board Finance Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Finance Committee reviewed the final 2025 tax levy extension numbers, which came in slightly...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Will County to Take Jurisdiction of Countyline Road Following $1.8 Million Agreement with Kankakee County

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: Will County will absorb a 4.27-mile stretch of Countyline Road into its highway system, aided by...
will county board meeting.6

Will County Expands Narcan Distribution Amid Shifts in Opioid Overdose Demographics

Will County Public Health & Safety Committee Meeting | April 2, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Health Department is ramping up its opioid overdose prevention efforts by distributing more...
Police Crime

Additional Skeletal Remains Discovered at Mokena Property

Article Summary: Law enforcement officials have secured a property in Mokena for an extended search after a secondary sweep of the area revealed additional skeletal remains near the site where...
Travis

Beecher Man Charged with 10 Felony Counts for Possession of Child Sex Abuse Material

Article Summary: A 45-year-old Beecher resident turned himself in to Will County Sheriff's deputies to face 10 felony counts related to the possession of child sexual abuse material following a...
solar panels photovoltaics in solar farm

Will County Legislative Committee Unanimously Backs Resolution Demanding Return of Local Solar Siting Control

Will County Board Legislative Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board Legislative Committee unanimously passed an amended resolution on Tuesday demanding the Illinois General Assembly...
Perry House

Joseph Perry House Granted Historic Landmark Status

The committee unanimously approved a resolution (26-4451) designating the Joseph Perry House as a Will County Historic Landmark. Located at 365 W. Exchange Street in Crete Township (PIN # 23-15-09-318-016-0000),...
Will County Board Land Use Committee Graphic.3

Green Garden Township’s Wildflower Farm Granted Third Extension for Rural Events Permit

Will County Board Land Use & Development Committee Meeting | April 2, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Land Use and Development Committee unanimously approved a third 180-day extension for...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Will County Lowers Cedar Road Speed Limit Amid Debate Over Curve Safety and Fatalities

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Public Works and Transportation Committee approved lowering a segment of Cedar Road to...
Will County Board Graphic.01

Nine Will County Municipalities Face Expired License Plate Reader Agreements; Crest Hill Opts Out

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: Will County's network of Automatic License Plate Readers (ALPRs) is undergoing a renewal phase, with nine...
solar panels photovoltaics in solar farm

Judge Orders Will County Board to Approve Previously Denied Solar Farm Permits

On Wednesday, Will County’s efforts to maintain local control over solar farm developments were dealt a heavy blow when 12th District Associate Judge Ben Braun ruled the County Board must...