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What happens when political speeches collide with economic data? This clip pulls together the real economic State of the Union using the key statistics that hit your wallet: inflation, jobs, economic growth, the trade deficit, and the budget. Inflation is not “beaten.” Prices are still rising—around 2.5% on CPI and closer to 3% on the Fed’s preferred PCE measure. A key wrinkle: the government shutdown meant some prices weren’t collected, and the way CPI handled missing rent data likely made inflation look a bit better than reality. The good news is inflation is nowhere near the 9% pandemic peak. The bad news is progress has basically stalled over the past year. On jobs, the “record number employed” line is mostly a population story. The better signal is the unemployment rate and the share of people working—and those indicators suggest the labor market is slowly cooling. It’s not a collapse, but it is meaningfully worse than a year ago. Growth is the brightest spot: GDP rose about 2.2%—not recessionary, but not boom times either. Meanwhile, the trade deficit obsession doesn’t match reality: tariffs hit a 90-year high, yet the trade deficit barely budged. Finally, the budget deficit remains large (about 5.8% of GDP) despite all the rhetoric about making government “leaner”—raising the question: why are we still running near-crisis deficits in non-crisis times? Undermining economic institutions has costs, too. When the Fed and statistical agencies are attacked, trust erodes—and that’s a threat to long-run prosperity. Stakes: If inflation stays sticky, unemployment drifts up, and deficits remain elevated, it can mean higher borrowing costs, slower wage growth, and less economic security for you and your family. Topics covered: Why “prices are falling” doesn’t match the data How CPI inflation differs from PCE inflation (the Fed’s preferred gauge) How the government shutdown distorted price measurement Why grocery inflation still feels high Why “record jobs” is a misleading metric How the unemployment rate quietly worsened What 2.2% GDP growth really signals Why a recession didn’t happen (and what that means) How tariffs relate to the trade deficit (and why the theory failed) Why the trade deficit isn’t the best scorecard for prosperity How big the budget deficit is in context (share of GDP) Why deficit fears depend on “ability to pay,” not big scary numbers How tax cuts, tariffs, and DOGE still didn’t shrink the deficit Why running near-crisis deficits in normal times is risky The importance of Fed independence and trusted economic data Contents: 0:00 A Data-Driven “Economic State Of The Union” 0:40 Inflation: What The Numbers Actually Say 2:10 CPI Vs PCE (And The Shutdown Measurement Problem) 3:35 Jobs: The “Record Employment” Claim Explained 5:05 Unemployment: The Slow Drift Up 6:05 Growth: 2.2% And What It Means 6:55 Tariffs And The Trade Deficit Reality Check 8:05 The Budget Deficit: 5.8% Of GDP 9:05 Institutions: The Fed, BLS, And Democracy 🎯 Key takeaway: Ignore the slogans—watch inflation, unemployment, deficits, and institutions if you want the real economic picture. 📌 Subscribe for more economics that’s measured in percentages, not press releases. 📊