Everyday Economics: A stable labor market is not enough
The May jobs report offered a measure of reassurance: the labor market is stable. Employers are still adding jobs, layoffs remain contained, and the economy is not showing the kind of “break” that typically signals an imminent downturn.That matters. A stable labor market provides the income floor that supports spending and keeps the gears of the economy turning. But stability is not a synonym for strength. For the modern consumer, the urgent question isn’t whether the paycheck is arriving – it’s how much of the grocery store that paycheck still buys.Currently, the answer is: less than it did a few months ago. As nominal wage growth cools and inflation remains stubborn, real wages are slipping. Workers are employed, but their purchasing power is eroding.The Consumption MirageThis distinction is critical because consumer spending often looks resilient even as household finances hollow out. Families don’t immediately surrender their standard of living when prices outpace raises; they absorb the hit first.They draw down pandemic-era savings, lean on credit, and “trade down” on brands. But because necessities like housing, utilities, gasoline and childcare aren’t optional, spending stays high even as the quality of that spending deteriorates. The surface remains calm while the pressure builds below.The Productivity Paradox: Why Tech Isn’t Rescuing the WorkerThis is where the artificial intelligence and productivity story takes a complicated turn for businesses. While we are seeing a genuine “technology shock” in the data – efficiency gains that mirror the early 1990s IT boom – the benefits are not being shared across the board.For businesses, the AI-driven productivity shift is creating a substitution effect. Firms are finding ways to produce more output with fewer labor hours. In a healthy “broad-based” boom, these efficiency gains would allow businesses to raise wages without sacrificing margins. Instead, we are seeing a divergence:For Firms: Technology is protecting margins. Businesses are becoming leaner and more efficient, allowing output to hold steady even as they slow their pace of hiring.For Workers: This “efficiency” means less leverage. Firms can grow without aggressively bidding up wages across the income distribution.The result is a productivity signal that looks great on a corporate balance sheet but feels invisible in a household budget. The economy is becoming more efficient, but that efficiency is acting as a buffer for corporate earnings rather than a lift for worker purchasing power.The Lagged Risk to DemandFor businesses, the danger is that this “absorption phase” eventually ends. Households can only rely on savings and debt for so long. By the time the consumer pullback finally shows up in sales volumes, the damage to household balance sheets is already done, which usually triggers a sharper-than-expected hit to future margins and hiring plans.The Fed’s Blind SpotThis creates a treacherous path for the Federal Reserve. A stable labor-market headline reduces the urgency for the Fed to pivot. However, if the FOMC reacts solely to “hot” inflation data by maintaining high rates, they risk missing the internal deterioration of the consumer.Higher rates cannot lower the price of eggs or insurance premiums, but they can make the credit that households are currently using as a lifeline much more expensive.The Bottom Line: The May jobs report suggests the engine hasn’t stalled, but the fuel – real purchasing power – is running low. Until inflation cools or productivity gains start trickling into paychecks, “stability” will continue to feel a lot like a squeeze.
Latest News Stories
USDOT puts $2.1 billion of taxpayer funds for CTA under review
No UPCODE Act could be part of shutdown solution … and more
Health care policy remains sticking point in Senate’s govt shutdown talks
ICE arrests 9 Chileans linked to South American theft group operating in NJ
WATCH: State police prepares ICE protest zones; energy policy debate continues
DHS blames ‘sanctuary’ politicians for ICE violence
Illinois news in brief: Department of Transportation reviews CTA spending plans; Illinois manufacturers kick off ‘Makers on the Move’ tour; Hearings continue on energy legislation
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board for September 18, 2025
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Frankfort Township Board for August 11, 2025
Illinois quick hits: Transit cliff revision criticized; Pike County shooting investigation
Pritzker open to spending on Bears infrastructure, concerns remain about debt
IL legislators weigh energy policy some say will increase costs
Analyst points to inefficiencies as Pritzker touts record spending on infrastructure