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As US edges closer to stagflation, economists blame Trump policies

1 day ago
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It’s a strange time for the US economy,Prices are rising, jobs growth has stalled, uncertainty is everywhere and stock markets have soared to record highs,Against this background a scary word last used in the 1970s is being uttered again: stagflation,Stagflation is the term that describes “stagnant” growth combined with “inflation” of prices,It means that companies are producing and hiring less, but prices are still going up.

It’s a scenario that some economists say can be worse than a recession.The last time the US saw a period of prolonged stagflation was in the 1970s during the oil shock crisis.Higher oil prices caused inflation to rise, while unemployment rose as consumers cut back on spending.For now, the US economy isn’t experiencing stagflation, but recent data has shown it is edging closer to it.After Donald Trump’s tariffs were announced in the spring, official data initially suggested the economy was shaking them off.

New jobs were being added to the economy at a stable pace, while inflation went down to 2.3% – the lowest it had been since 2021.However, when new labor market data was released in August, it became clear that there had been an impact on hiring that had been slow to appear in the data.Initial job figures for May and June were revised down by 258,000.While figures in July and August were slightly stronger, it was still a marked drop compared with earlier in the year.

Meanwhile, inflation started crawling back up in April.In August, the annualized inflation rate hit 2.9%, the highest since January.Brett House, an economist at Columbia Business School, said that surveys of economists showed expectations of a recession for the year ahead was at a three-year low in January.Growth was expected to remain solid, and inflation was expected to continue easing.

“Both of those expectations have been turned around by the set of policies and their erratic implementation,” House said.“We’ve seen growth forecasts for the remainder of this year cut substantially, and we have seen inflation forecasts pushed up.”In other words, the economy has both become more stagnant and inflationary – stagflation.Economists are pointing to two policies coming out of the White House that are pushing the economy closer toward stagflation.Trump’s crackdown on immigration has cut down the number of available workers and also increased the cost of hiring.

And when it comes to prices, tariffs have just started to have a noticeable impact as companies pass tariff costs on to consumers,Investors are banking on hopes the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates next week, but the future of the US economy remains uncertain,In his closely watched speech at the Fed’s Jackson Hole symposium last month, the Fed chair, Jerome Powell, outlined the “shifting balance of risks” that have appeared over the summer,“While the labor market appears to be in balance, it is a curious kind of balance that results from a marked slowing in both the supply of and demand for workers,” Powell said,Meanwhile, “higher tariffs have begun to push up prices in some categories of goods.

”Stagflation weakens the Fed’s ability to balance the economy.Adjusting interest rates can help balance out unemployment and inflation, but only if one is rising.When inflation surged to 9.1% in summer 2022, raising interest rates helped bring prices down.Inflation went down to below 2.

5%, but the unemployment rate went up in the meanwhile, from a low of 3.4% in 2023 to 4.3% this past August.The Fed actually has more power during a recession, which economists broadly define as a period of slowed economic activity.When Covid lockdowns caused a recession, with massive unemployment, in 2020, the Fed lowered interest rates down to near zero to stimulate the economy.

Because we’re not seeing stagflation yet, the Fed moving rates down next week could help the labor market without causing prices to soar.But the move comes with uncertainty.“Say stagflation is happening, but at a very slow pace, because firms are waiting to pass through [the cost of tariffs],” said Sebnem Kalemli-Ozcan, an economist at Brown University.“Firms are going to start seeing demand increase and say: ‘Oh, now I can pass through my higher costs on to more consumers.’ … Then we are going to see inflation.

”One analysis from Goldman Sachs said that US consumers had already absorbed 22% of the cost of tariffs, and that they could eventually take on 67% if current tariffs continue,If prices continue to rise, and the labor market continues to slow, stagflation will get stronger,“If [stagflation] happens, it’s a very depressive situation because people are going to lose their jobs, unemployment is going to increase and people who are looking for jobs are going to have a very hard time finding jobs,That’s going to be the hard part,” Kalemli-Ozcan said,The Yale Budget Lab estimated that Trump’s tariffs could increase the number of Americans living in poverty by at least 650,000 as tariffs become what the lab calls an “indirect tax”.

The Trump administration has urged Americans to be patient with the impacts of the tariffs and has claimed that recent economic data has been “rigged” against the president.“The real numbers that I’m talking about are going to be whatever it is, but will be in a year from now,” Trump said earlier this month.“You’re going to see job numbers like our country has never seen.”
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Australia’s workers reaping greater share of national income than before pandemic

Workers are now receiving more of the “economic pie” than before the pandemic, with the increase in labour’s share of national income delivering an extra $28bn into the pockets of Australians over the past year alone.Pat Bustamante, a senior economist at Westpac, said his analysis suggested that the tighter post-Covid labour market was behind the greater share going to workers, from an average of 53.8% through the 2010s, to more than 55% now.While the movement in the division of national income appears small, even fractional changes translate to tens of billions of dollars in an economy of about $2.8tn

about 13 hours ago
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‘Cider to the power of 10’: bumper apple harvest has UK cider makers drooling

“If you love cider, this is cider to the power of 10,” says Barny Butterfield, speaking about the flavours packed by some of this year’s “special” apples.Indeed Butterfield, the owner of Sandford Orchards, near Exeter, is buying extra tanks to increase cider production after the UK’s hottest summer on record resulted in an abundance of fruit.“I think God’s a cider maker,” he joked. To thrive, fruit trees need heat and light and this year “we had lots of both”.“I’ve had boughs breaking on trees under the weight of fruit,” Butterfield continued

about 14 hours ago
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UK workers wary of AI despite Starmer’s push to increase uptake, survey finds

It is the work shortcut that dare not speak its name. A third of people do not tell their bosses about their use of AI tools amid fears their ability will be questioned if they do.Research for the Guardian has revealed that only 13% of UK adults openly discuss their use of AI with senior staff at work and close to half think of it as a tool to help people who are not very good at their jobs to get by.Amid widespread predictions that many workers face a fight for their jobs with AI, polling by Ipsos found that among more than 1,500 British workers aged 16 to 75, 33% said they did not discuss their use of AI to help them at work with bosses or other more senior colleagues. They were less coy with people at the same level, but a quarter of people believe “co-workers will question my ability to perform my role if I share how I use AI”

2 days ago
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AI content needs to be labelled to protect us | Letters

Marcus Beard’s article on artificial intelligence slopaganda (No, that wasn’t Angela Rayner dancing and rapping: you’ll need to understand AI slopaganda, 9 September) highlights a growing problem – what happens when we no longer know what is true? What will the erosion of trust do to our society?The rise of deepfakes is increasing at an ever faster rate due to the ease at which anyone can create realistic images, audio and even video. Generative AI models have now become so sophisticated that a recent survey showed that less than 1% of respondents could correctly identify the best deepfake images and videos.This content is being used to manipulate, defraud, abuse and mislead people. Fraud using AI cost the US $12.3bn in 2023 and Deloitte predicts that could reach $40bn by 2027

3 days ago
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England still favourites to lift Rugby World Cup, but betting on them is another matter | Robert Kitson

Roses are red, Scotland in blue, the stakes are rising, how will they do? The scoreboard answer from a soaking wet Bristol was predictable enough. When bookmakers start quoting prices of 1000-1 on for a team to win a two‑horse race, the chances of England failing to reach the semi‑finals were roughly on a par with anyone in the stands getting sunstroke.With it came yet another record statistic for John Mitchell’s bunch of serial winners. No leading international rugby side in history has previously won 31 Tests in a row as England’s women have now done: 61 victories in their past 62 Tests leaves precious little room for people to question their pedigree or killer instinct.Yet would you absolutely put your mortgage on England hoisting the World Cup in just under a fortnight? This may, of course, depend on the precise sum of money involved and the potential availability of other emergency income streams

about 9 hours ago
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England 40-8 Scotland: Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025 quarter-final – as it happened

Here is Sarah Rendell’s match report from a blustery Ashton Gate, where England won their 31st game in a row. Two more to go. Thanks for joining me, enjoy your evenings.France will be England’s semi-final opponents, but only after Ireland gave them an almighty scare earlier today:Some words from Bryan Easson on his final game as Scotland head coach. “We did what we wanted to do, reaching the knockout stages

about 10 hours ago
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Phillipson and Powell kick off Labour deputy race with very different visions for role

about 11 hours ago
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Labour MPs will hope Starmer’s words after far-right rally signal shift in tone

about 11 hours ago
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NHS will die under Reform unless doctors stop striking and work with Labour, says Wes Streeting

about 13 hours ago
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UK politics: Scale of ‘Unite the Kingdom’ march shows free speech ‘alive and well’ in UK, says minister – as it happened

about 14 hours ago
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‘Busted flush’: Welsh Labour prepares to fight byelection amid dire polling

about 16 hours ago
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As Starmer’s popularity tanks, what can Labour learn from Zohran Mamdani’s success in New York?

about 16 hours ago