ReportWire

Tag: Economy

  • Healey seeks to streamline housing permits

    BOSTON — Gov. Maura Healey wants to streamline the state’s environmental regulatory process for building new homes as part of broader efforts to ease a shortage of housing.

    A set of draft regulations rolled out by the Healey administration on Tuesday would cut the review period for housing projects to a month by requiring developers to complete a “simplified” Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act review instead of a more detailed Environmental Impact Report, which can take up to a year.


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Scott Bessent Fights Brutal Job Numbers

    As if Scott Bessent wasn’t angry enough already.

    The Treasury secretary, in the headlines in recent days for allegedly threatening to smack one of his colleagues in the face, now finds himself in damage control mode after the release of a brutal Bureau of Labor Statistics report on Tuesday—the latest sign that Donald Trump may not be ushering in the economic “golden age” he previously promised.

    On Tuesday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics issued revised job-growth estimates, sharing that more than 900,000 fewer jobs had been added for the year ending in March 2025. Much of the time span covered in the report was before Trump took office, as Bessent was quick to point out Tuesday. “President Trump inherited a far worse economy than reported,” he posted. But the ugly outlook is being exacerbated by Trump’s trade war and unpredictability—and runs counter to his lofty campaign promises to “end inflation” and start “saving our economy,” beginning on “day one.”

    That’s bad news for the president, whose poll numbers are on the decline as voters express concerns about their pocketbooks. It also puts pressure on Bessent, who has positioned himself as a force of calm and stability in the administration and succeeded, to some extent, in keeping markets steady amid Trump’s threatening of the Fed and firing of the BLS chief over numbers he didn’t like. “President Trump was elected for change, and we are going to push through with the economic policies that are going to set the economy right,” Bessent said Sunday on NBC News’ Meet the Press. “I believe by the fourth quarter, we are going to see a substantial acceleration.”

    But it’ll be a new challenge to maintain market confidence as the economic alarms continue blaring. And his fights—perhaps in the literal sense, it turns out—with fellow Trump officials would seem to undercut his self-styled “adult in the room” persona.

    The most recent conflict, first reported by Politico on Monday, was with Bill Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, who is leading the charge against Lisa Cook, the Federal Reserve board member whose firing Trump announced over social media. As the outlet reported, Bessent confronted Pulte at a well-attended dinner at DC’s Executive Branch club, with the secretary addressing rumors that Pulte had been bad-mouthing him to Trump. “Why the fuck are you talking to the president about me?” Bessent reportedly asked Pulte at the dinner. “I’m gonna punch you in your fucking face.”

    “I’m going to fucking beat your ass,” he threatened, for good measure.

    It wasn’t the first clash between Bessent and another administration colleague: Bessent also reportedly got into a fiery shouting match over the Internal Revenue Service with Elon Musk, who at the time was taking a “chain saw” to the federal government as the head of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. (There was enough speculation that the shiner Musk sported at a White House event was courtesy of Bessent that the Treasury chief went out of his way to publicly deny responsibility. Musk, for his part, said the injury came from playing with his young son.)

    The last time Trump got a bad BLS report, he fired the bureau’s then commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, and not long after nominated agency critic E.J. Antoni to replace her. If that doesn’t get him the kinds of numbers he’s looking for, perhaps a visit from his hot-tempered Treasury secretary could do the trick.

    Eric Lutz

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  • The U.S. labor market added 911,000 fewer jobs than earlier reported, BLS says

    The U.S. labor market added 911,000 fewer jobs in the 12-month period ended March 2025 than had earlier been reported, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Tuesday. The major downward revision signals that the labor market was slowing more last year than had earlier been reported. 

    The so-called preliminary benchmark revision, produced annually by the BLS, was bigger than a decline of roughly 800,000 that economists had forecast prior to the release. The revision aims to better account for businesses that have opened or closed in the 12-month period it covers, as these changes are sometimes missed by the BLS’ monthly jobs report. 

    The downward revision comes as the labor market appears to be ailing, with Friday’s disappointing August jobs report sending warning signals about the pace of hiring across the U.S. At the same time, the BLS is in the crosshairs of the Trump administration, with the president last month questioning the validity of the monthly jobs report after the data included a significant downward revision, prompting him to fire the commissioner of the BLS. 

    Revisions are a normal part of the statistical process at the BLS, economists note. That’s because the monthly jobs data is based on a survey of businesses, and some companies respond after the agency’s initial jobs report has been issued. Because of that, the BLS updates its data to reflect the new information. 

    The sharp downward annual revision signals that the job market was facing bigger headwinds in 2024 and early 2025 than earlier reported, and could add to the Federal Reserve’s case for cutting its benchmark rate at its Sept. 17 meeting, economists said.

    Today’s data suggests cooling in the labor market is more dramatic than previously thought,” said Elizabeth Renter, senior economist at NerdWallet, in an email. 

    She added, “This strengthens the likelihood that the Fed will cut rates next week, as it’s additional evidence that the labor market side of the dual mandate needs some attention.”

    The annual revisions are based on fresh data from the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW), which tracks employment and wages reported by employers that cover more than 95% of U.S. jobs, or about 11 million workplaces. 

    The QCEW tracks when businesses open or close, something that is difficult for the monthly jobs report to track. For instance, if a business doesn’t respond to the monthly survey, the BLS doesn’t immediately know if the company simply isn’t responding or if it has shut down. 

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  • Public defenders office hires new attorneys with state funding

    BOSTON — The state’s public defender office is lawyering up after getting an infusion of state money aimed at addressing a shortage of attorneys, which has led to the release of criminal suspects who lack legal representation.

    In a report to legislative leaders, the Committee for Public Counsel Services said the agency is undertaking the largest staffing expansion in its history to provide representation for indigent clients “while ensuring that attorneys and support staff are adequately supervised, trained, and retained.”


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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • Major jobs revision Tuesday could show the labor market is weaker than previously thought

    The latest jobs report points to a labor market that’s faltering, but the slowdown may have begun much earlier. Economists expect the Bureau of Labor Statistics tomorrow to issue a major downward revision, showing the nation added hundreds of thousands fewer jobs than first reported.

    On Sept. 9, the BLS will release its preliminary benchmark revision to labor market data, which aims to better account for businesses that have opened or closed. Economists say the revision, covering the 12-month period through March 2025, could show that hiring during that time was about 800,000 jobs lower than previously reported. 

    The report could draw attention from the Trump administration, as the president last month questioned the validity of the monthly jobs report — and fired the commissioner of the BLS — after the data included a significant downward revision. Hiring experts and economists point to a job market that’s stalling out as some businesses are bearing increased tariff costs while others are tapping artificial intelligence as a way to lower labor costs and replace workers.

    “The labor market will likely look even worse after the release of the preliminary benchmark revision to payrolls on Sept. 9,” Bill Adams, chief economist for Comerica Bank, noted in an email. 

    The revision could show that employment was reduced by about 775,000 for the 12 months through March, Adams estimated. That would indicate that the average monthly job growth in 2024 actually stood at 100,000 per month, down from the 165,000 previously reported, he added. 

    The revision would cover only the first three months of Mr. Trump’s second administration, with the bulk of the timeframe occurring in the last year of former President Biden’s administration.

    Job growth has slowed dramatically in recent months, with the employers adding an average of 29,000 jobs each month from June through August, the most recent BLS data shows. 

    Why does the government revise its jobs data?

    Jobs revisions occur each month, with the BLS updating its data to reflect more recent information it has received from businesses about the pace of hiring. That’s because some companies respond late to the BLS’ surveys, which means the agency receives an influx of new information after it has issued its initial monthly jobs report, prompting the fresh numbers. 

    But once a year, the BLS also issues an annual revision based on fresh data from the Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW), which tracks employment and wages reported by employers that cover more than 95% of U.S. jobs.

    While the monthly jobs report relies on about 50,000 responses for each period, the QCEW covers 11 million workplaces — but that scope requires more time for collecting the data versus the BLS’ monthly report, Adams of Comerica said. 

    “The QCEW’s detail lets it directly measure jobs added at newly-opened workplaces and lost at closing ones, which account for several millions of employment churn each year,” he added. 

    What happened in the last annual revision?

    The BLS issued a major downward revision last year for the same annual data, showing that employers added 818,000 fewer jobs in the 12 months ended March 2024 than previously estimated. That lowered average monthly job growth for the period to 174,000, down from the initial estimate of 242,000.

    At the time, the downward revision was seen as evidence that the labor market was showing cracks, and it was viewed as paving the way for the Federal Reserve to cut rates at its September 2024 meeting.

    What does this mean for a Fed rate cut?

    The Fed will be focused on analyzing recent economic data, such as the latest jobs report and the next Consumer Price Index, which will be issued on Sept. 11. Economists expect the CPI to show an annualized increase of 2.9% in August, higher than the prior month’s 2.7% and well above the Fed’s goal of reaching a 2% annual rate.

    With the labor market hitting a wall in recent months, economists now expect the Federal Reserve to cut its benchmark rate at its Sept. 17 meeting. The only question is whether the Fed might usher in a jumbo cut of 0.5 percentage points, or opt for the typical cut of 0.25 percentage points. 

    “Market odds currently see a 100% chance of a Fed rate cut this month, with a small constituent seeing an outsized 50-basis-point cut on Sept. 17 within the realm of possibility,” Anthony Saglimbene, Ameriprise chief market strategist, wrote in a Sept. 8 research note. 

    But, he added, if the August’s Consumer Price Index comes in hotter than expected on Sept. 11, that “would likely throw cold water on the idea that the Fed is considering an outsized September rate cut.”

    President Trump has repeatedly lashed out at Powell this year over the Fed’s decision to keep interest rates level. In June, Mr. Trump publicly mused over whether to fire him, although many legal experts say it’s not clear he has the constitutional authority to do so. Powell’s term as Fed chair ends on May 15, 2026.

    Trump nominates replacement commissioner

    President Trump in August announced E.J. Antoni as his nominee to lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Monday. Antoni, a fellow at conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation, has criticized the BLS, questioning its methodology.

    “DOGE needs to take a chainsaw to the BLS…,” he wrote in a November post on X.

    In a statement Monday backing the BLS, the National Association for Business Economics (NABE), a professional association of global economists, applied economists, data scientists and academics, said it “stands firmly with the dedicated economists and statisticians at BLS and across the federal statistical agencies.” 

    The association went on to urge policymakers and others in the business and economics community “to defend the integrity of the U.S. statistical system and ensure it remains the global gold standard,” it said.

    “The Bureau of Labor Statistics needs a knowledgeable and qualified commissioner who will uphold the agency’s mission and protect its trusted professional staff from political pressure. A commissioner with deep expertise and independence is essential to maintaining public trust, ensuring impartial analysis, and safeguarding the credibility of U.S. statistics,” NABE added.

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  • Japan’s economy grew at faster rate in fiscal Q1 than initially thought

    Japan’s economy expanded at a stronger rate in the fiscal first quarter than previously estimated, despite worries about U.S. tariffs and domestic political uncertainty, according to government data

    TOKYO — Japan’s economy expanded at a stronger rate in the fiscal first quarter than previously estimated, despite worries about U.S. tariffs and domestic political uncertainty, according to government data released Monday.

    The Cabinet Office said Japan’s real gross domestic product, the sum value of a nation’s goods and services, grew at a seasonally adjusted 2.2% annualized rate in the April-June quarter from the previous quarter.

    That was better than the preliminary estimate for 1.0% growth, which came out last month, as solid consumer spending and inventories lifted growth more than previously thought.

    Quarter-on-quarter, Japan’s GDP grew 0.5%, up from the initial estimate for a 0.3% rise, which was also what analysts projected, according to RaboResearch.

    That marked the fifth straight quarter of growth. The annualized number shows what the growth, or contraction, would have been if the quarterly rate continued for a year.

    U.S. President Donald Trump’s move to raise tariffs on Japanese imports is a major worry for the export-dependent economy, especially auto exports, which now face a 15% tariff, up from 2.5%.

    Another concern is the looming political uncertainty after Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced Sunday he is stepping down as head of the ruling party. A party election will follow over the next weeks.

    Private consumption rose 0.4%, according to the latest government data, better than the initial estimate for 0.2% growth, raising domestic demand growth into positive territory at 0.2% growth, instead of contracting 0.1%, as in the earlier data.

    Japan’s benchmark Nikkei rose in morning trading, despite Ishiba’s announcement on resigning, as the move was somewhat expected, and the market appeared to welcome the action as a step forward.

    But analysts say uncertainty remains because it’s still unclear what parties might be brought in to form a coalition with the ruling party.

    ___

    Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama

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  • Asian shares rise after Japan’s prime minister resigns

    TOKYO — Asian shares mostly rose with Japan’s benchmark jumping higher in Monday morning trading, despite the looming political uncertainty after Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba announced last night he was stepping down as prime minister and head of his party.

    Analysts said his announcement was expected for some time and welcomed it as moving things forward, although uncertainty remains as an election at the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, or LDP, will need to be held, with several legislators stepping forward as candidates.

    “Markets may react short-term to the temporary uncertainty of lame-duck leadership, but this may resolve once a new leader is chosen. Meanwhile, the LDP’s position as a minority leading party is unlikely to change anytime soon, and as such compromise will be the name of the policy-making game,” said Naomi Fink, chief global strategist at Amova Asset Management.

    Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 gained 1.4% in morning trading to 43,630.54. South Korea’s Kospi gained 0.2% to 3,211.36. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.3% to 8,845.50

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng edged up 0.3% to 25,487.02, while the Shanghai Composite rose 0.2% to 25,487.02.

    Also Monday, Japan’s Cabinet Office said the economy expanded at a stronger rate in the fiscal first quarter than previously estimated, at a seasonally adjusted 2.2% annualized rate, better than the earlier 1.0% rate as solid consumer spending and inventories lifted growth more than previously thought.

    On Wall Street, stocks finished last week lower in Friday trading on uncertainty whether the U.S. job market has slowed by just enough to get the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates to help the economy, or by so much that a downturn may be on the way.

    After rising to an early gain, the S&P 500 erased it and fell 0.3% below the all-time high it set the day before. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 220 points, or 0.5%, after swinging between an early gain of nearly 150 points and a loss of 400. The Nasdaq composite edged down by less than 0.1%.

    A report from the U.S. Labor Department said American employers hired fewer workers in August than economists expected. The government also said that earlier estimates for June and July overstated hiring by 21,000 jobs.

    The disappointing numbers follow last month’s discouraging jobs update, along with other lackluster reports in intervening weeks, and traders are now betting on a 100% probability that the Fed will cut its main interest rate at its next meeting on Sept. 17.

    In energy trading, benchmark U.S. crude added 74 cents to $62.61 a barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, rose 80 cents to $66.30 a barrel.

    In currency trading, the U.S. dollar edged up to 148.20 Japanese yen from 147.39 yen. The euro cost $1.1709, down from $1.1723.

    ___

    AP Business Writer Stan Choe in New York contributed to this report.

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  • Top word Americans use to describe economy is

    The CBS News polling team asked Americans to come up with one word to describe the economy, and the top one they picked was uncertain, CBS News director of elections and surveys Anthony Salvanto says as he breaks down the latest CBS News poll.

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  • Trump hits the links amid economic slowdown concerns

    Wall Street took hits on the market after hiring slumped in August. The economy added 22,000 jobs, far below expectations, fueling fresh concerns about a slowdown. Nikole Killion has more details.

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  • Trump’s job market promises fall flat as hiring collapses and inflation ticks up

    WASHINGTON — The U.S. job market has gone from healthy to lethargic during President Donald Trump’s first seven months back in the White House, as hiring has collapsed and inflation has started to climb once again as his tariffs take hold.

    Friday’s jobs report showed employers added a mere 22,000 jobs in August, as the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.3%. Factories and construction firms shed workers. Revisions showed the economy lost 13,000 jobs in June, the first monthly losses since December 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The new data exposed the widening gap between the booming economy Trump promised and the more anemic reality of what he’s managed to deliver so far. The White House prides itself on operating at a breakneck speed, but it’s now asking the American people for patience, with Trump saying better job numbers might be a year away.

    “We’re going to win like you’ve never seen,” Trump said Friday. “Wait until these factories start to open up that are being built all over the country, you’re going to see things happen in this country that nobody expects.”

    The plea for patience has done little to comfort Americans, as economic issues that had been a strength for Trump for a decade have evolved into a persistent weakness. Approval of Trump’s economic leadership hit 56% in early 2020 during his first term, but that figure was 38% in July of this year, according to polling by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

    The situation has left Trump searching for others to blame, while Democrats say the problem begins and ends with him.

    Trump maintained Friday that the economy would be adding jobs if Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell had slashed benchmark interest rates, even though doing so to the degree that Trump wants could ignite higher inflation. Investors expect a rate cut by the Fed at its next meeting in September, although that’s partially because of weakening job numbers.

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Trump’s tariffs and freewheeling policies were breaking the economy and the jobs report proved it.

    “This is a blaring red light warning to the entire country that Donald Trump is squeezing the life out of our economy,” Schumer said.

    By many measures, Trump has dug himself into a hole on the economy as its performance has yet to come anywhere close to his hype.

    — Trump in 2024 suggested that deporting immigrants in the country illegally would protect “Black jobs.” But the Black unemployment rate has climbed to 7.5%, the highest since October 2021, as the Trump administration has engaged in aggressive crackdowns on immigration.

    — At his April tariffs announcement, Trump said, “Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country and you see it happening already.” Since April, manufacturers have cut 42,000 jobs and builders have downsized by 8,000.

    — Trump said in his inaugural address that the “liquid gold” of oil would make the nation wealthy as he pivoted the economy to fossil fuels. But the logging and mining sectors — which includes oil and natural gas — have shed 12,000 jobs since January. While gasoline prices are lower, the Energy Information Administration in August estimated that crude oil production, the source of the wealth promised by Trump, would fall next year by an average of 100,000 barrels a day.

    — At 2024 rallies, Trump promised to “end” inflation on “day one” and halve electricity prices within 12 months. Consumer prices have climbed from a 2.3% annual increase in April to 2.7% in July. Electricity costs are up 4.6% so far this year.

    The Trump White House maintains that the economy is on the cusp of breakout growth, with its new import taxes poised to raise hundreds of billions of dollars annually if they can withstand court challenges.

    At a Thursday night dinner with executives and founders from companies including Apple, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI and Meta, Trump said the facilities being built to develop artificial intelligence would deliver “jobs numbers like our country has never seen before” at some point “a year from now.”

    But Michael Strain, director of economic policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, noted that Trump’s promise that strong job growth is ahead contradicts his unsubstantiated claims that recent jobs data was faked to embarrass him. That accusation prompted him to fire the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics last month after the massive downward revisions in the July jobs report.

    Strain said it’s rational for the administration to say better times are coming, but doing so seems to undermine Trump’s allegations that the numbers are rigged.

    “The president clearly stated that the data were not trustworthy and that the weakness in the data was the product of anti-Trump manipulation,” Strain said. “And if that’s true, what are we being patient about?”

    The White House maintained that Friday’s jobs report was an outlier in an otherwise good economy.

    Kevin Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, said the Atlanta Federal Reserve is expecting annualized growth of 3% this quarter, which he said would be more consistent with monthly job gains of 100,000.

    Hassett said inflation is low, income growth is “solid” and new investments in assets such as buildings and equipment will ultimately boost hiring.

    But Daniel Hornung, who was deputy director of the National Economic Council in the Biden White House, said he didn’t see evidence of a coming rebound in the August jobs data.

    “Pretty broad based weakening,” Hornung said. “The decline over three months in goods producing sectors like construction and manufacturing is particularly notable. There were already headwinds there and tariffs are likely exacerbating challenges.”

    Stephen Moore, an economics fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation and supporter of the president, said the labor market is “definitely softening,” even as he echoed Trump’s claims that the jobs numbers are not reliable.

    He said the economy was adjusting to the Trumpian shift of higher tariffs and immigration reductions that could lower the pool of available workers.

    “The problem going forward is a shortage or workers, not a shortage of jobs,” Moore said. “In some ways, that’s a good problem to have.”

    But political consultant and pollster Frank Luntz took the contrarian view that the jobs report won’t ultimately matter for the political fortunes of Trump and his movement because voters care more about inflation and affordability.

    “That’s what the public is watching, that’s what the public cares about,” Luntz said. “Everyone who wants a job has a job, for the most part.”

    From the perspective of elections, Trump still has roughly a year to demonstrate progress on improving affordability, Luntz said. Voters will generally lock in their opinions about the economy by Labor Day before the midterm elections next year.

    In other words, Trump still has time.

    “It’s still up for grabs,” he said. “The deciding point will come Labor Day of 2026.”

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  • Reporter’s Notebook: Can a manufacturing renaissance deliver for workers?

    Despite solid output and productivity growth for manufacturing, the sector has lost about 78,000 jobs this year. Can President Trump deliver on his promise for a manufacturing renaissance? “CBS Evening News” co-anchor John Dickerson explains.

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  • Economist reacts to the August jobs report that fell below expectations

    The economy added just 22,000 jobs in August, which was well below expectations. The Dow reacted by falling 220 points. Economist Michael Strain of the American Enterprise Institute gives his take.

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  • A possible upside to August’s slowing job growth

    Employers across the U.S. added 22,000 jobs in August, falling short of economists’ muted expectations and signaling the labor market is facing sharp headwinds from mounting economic uncertainty amid the Trump administration’s wide-ranging tariffs. Jo Ling Kent has the biggest takeaways.

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  • The Labor Market Looks Broken—Is There a Fix Beyond Interest Rate Cuts?

    The weak August jobs report increases pressure on the Fed to cut interest rates this fall. Getty Images

    “The job market is done, busted.” That’s how Chris Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBonds, described the August jobs report released today (Sept. 5). The unemployment rate has climbed to its highest level since 2021, fueling fears that the U.S. may be tipping into recession for real.

    The U.S. economy added just 22,000 jobs in August, far short of the 75,000 expected. The Bureau of Labor Statistics also revised June’s data to show a staggering loss of 13,000 jobs. Over the past three months, the economy has added only 29,000 jobs in total.

    August’s payroll losses were particularly acute in professional and business services, the federal government and wholesale trade. But weakness was evident across sectors. “There have also been sustained losses over recent months in manufacturing, construction and mining, an indication that Trump’s blue-collar renaissance is clearly not happening,” Elise Gould, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute, posted on Bluesky.

    Analysts now widely expect the Federal Reserve to cut rates by 25 basis points at its Sept. 17 meeting, with further reductions likely in October and November. The pace of those cuts will depend on August’s inflation reading, due Sept. 11.

    Oliver Allen, senior economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, warned that the risk of layoffs is rising as employers lose confidence in the economy’s outlook. “So far, employers have not hired or fired much, but there are risks that layoffs could increase and would be an indication of a significant slowdown,” Allen told Observer. He estimates GDP growth at 1.7 percent this year, down from 2.8 percent in 2023. To prevent a deeper slowdown, he said the Fed must cut rates, and President Trump should ease tariff and immigration policies that have constrained the labor supply.

    If the job market deteriorates sharply, Allen added, “there isn’t much the government could do right away and any policy changes would take time to pass, as we saw with the Big Beautiful Bill.”

    A German-style fix?

    Allen suggested one option would be adopting something akin to Germany’s Kurzarbeit program, which subsidizes wages to help employers retain workers. But he noted such a “social market economic agenda” is unlikely to appeal to the Trump administration, which would probably lean toward unemployment insurance rather than payroll subsidies.

    Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics, said the U.S. labor market would have to weaken far more before Washington considered European-style subsidies or another round of pandemic-era programs like the Paycheck Protection Program.

    “So far, we don’t see enough evidence to say the job market is signalling recession,” Englund told Observer. “Weekly jobless claims have been moving sideways, and retail sales and household income remain strong, supporting our soft-landing scenario.”

    Englund also downplayed concerns about tariffs. “The tariffs’ bravado continues to look more like a negotiating strategy, and [the administration] has been reaching agreements with different countries,” he said. “The tariffs will bring billions of dollars in revenues, which will finance the Big Beautiful Bill’s tax cuts, so the net effect on inflation will be zero.”

    The Labor Market Looks Broken—Is There a Fix Beyond Interest Rate Cuts?

    Ivan Castano

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  • Watch Live: Trump signs Department of War order, makes announcements at White House

     

    Judge rules Trump administration’s termination of temporary protected status for Venezuelans and Haitians is illegal

    U.S. District Judge Edward Chen ruled that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s move to revoke the temporary protected status (TPS) designation for roughly 1 million Venezuelans and Haitians was illegal.

    The order restores protections for those TPS holders, allowing them to live and work in the U.S. 

    Chen said that Noem exceeded her authority when she ended the protections and must be set aside under the Administrative Procedure Act.

    “This case arose from action taken post haste by the current DHS Secretary, Kristi Noem, to revoke the legal status of Venezuelan and Haitian TPS holders, sending them back to conditions that are so dangerous that even the State Department advises against travel to their home countries,” the judge wrote. “The Secretary’s action in revoking TPS was not only unprecedented in the manner and speed in which it was taken but also violates the law.”


    By Melissa Quinn

     

    Trump signs executive order to change “woke” Department of Defense to Department of War

    The president signed an executive order renaming the Department of Defense to the Department of War, and changing the title of secretary of defense to secretary of war. 

    The president said it was a “woke” decision after World War I and World War II in 1947 to rename the department previously known as the Department of War to the Department of Defense. 

    “We’re going Department of War,” Mr. Trump said, asking his “Secretary of War” Pete Hegseth for his remarks. 

    Hegseth said the U.S. “hasn’t won a war since” World War II, though he added he did not intend to malign veterans of more recent wars. 

    “It’s gonna fight to win, not to lose. We’re gonna go on offense, not just on defense,” Hegseth said, adding the U.S. will “raise up warriors, not just defenders.” 

    The president also signed a bill to protect home buyers and sellers from having their personal information sold. 

    “That’s going to help the homeowners of our great country,” he said. 


    By Kathryn Watson

     

    Trump threatens to impose additional tariffs on European Union after it fines Google

    The president took to social media to threaten Europe with tariffs over the European Union’s decision to fine Google $3.5 billion, citing anticompetitive tech ad practices. The EU imposed the penalty Friday, Google’s fourth from the EU in roughly a decade. 

    “Europe today ‘hit’ another great American company, Google, with a $3.5 Billion Dollar fine, effectively taking money that would otherwise go to American Investments and Jobs,” Mr. Trump wrote. 

    Mr. Trump’s comments, posted shortly after the announcement of the fine, also came a day after he dined with Google CEO Sundar Pichai and other top tech executives at the White House. 

    “We cannot let this happen to brilliant and unprecedented American Ingenuity and, if it does, I will be forced to start a Section 301 proceeding to nullify the unfair penalties being charged to these Taxpaying American Companies,” the president continued. 

    Section 301 authorizes the Trade Act of 1974 permits the U.S. trade representative to impose tariffs or other import restrictions in an effort to fix an unfair foreign trade practices.


    By Kathryn Watson

     

    Eric Trump announces he’s writing a book

    Eric Trump, the president’s son, announced that he’s writing a book about major events in his and his father’s life, including the July 2024 assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania, and the 2022 search warrant executed at Mar-a-Lago by the FBI. Eric Trump is the executive vice president of the Trump Organization. 

    The president’s son said the “most painful moment” for him was when his “childhood home” of Mar-a-Lago was “raided” by federal authorities, as a part of the investigation into Mr. Trump’s handling of classified documents. 

    The president wrote the foreword. The book, “Under Siege,” will be released Oct. 14. 


    By Kathryn Watson

     

    Pentagon sending F-35 fighter jets to Caribbean amid tensions with Venezuela

    The Pentagon is sending 10 F-35 fighter jets to the Caribbean as tensions with Venezuela rise over the drug trade and the strike on narco-terrorists, a person familiar with the plans tells CBS News. 

    Reuters first reported the U.S. deployment of the jets, which will be deployed in operations targeting drug cartels.

    On Tuesday, a U.S. military strike sank a Venezuelan boat and killed 11 people. The president and top officials said the vessel was transporting illegal drugs. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the strike was just the start of a campaign against Venezuelan drug cartels. 

    By Willie James Inman, Jennifer Jacobs


     

    Senate Democrats to probe DOJ firings of those who worked for special counsel Jack Smith

    Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee are launching an investigation Friday into the firings of Justice Department attorneys and employees who investigated President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election and his handling of classified records. 

    In a letter obtained by CBS News, the panel’s Democrats are asking Attorney General Pam Bondi to hand over records about at least 20 Justice Department staff fired last month.

    The senators said they’re seeking information regarding the justification “for any of these draconian personnel actions,” in reference to the terminations. They said of Justice Department leaders, “Firing career administrative staff who lack decision-making authority because they were doing their jobs is a petty but pernicious abuse of power.”


    By Scott MacFarlane

     

    White House acknowledges disappointing jobs numbers

    The U.S. only added 22,000 jobs in August, falling short of forecasts. Some sectors, including manufacturing and professional services, lost jobs.

    Economists had forecasted payroll gains of 80,000. The unemployment rate also ticked up slightly, from 4.2% in July to 4.3% in August. 

    Top White House officials acknowledged the numbers did not meet expectations. Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, called it a “little bit of a disappointment number,” but said he expects that 22,000 figure to be “revised up.” 

    Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer said jobs “underperformed just a bit,” but said the economy as a whole is “still in the positive.”

    By Kristin Brown, Kathryn Watson 


     

    Trump says it’s “time to end” the “Epstein hoax”

    In a long Truth Social post, the president said it’s “time to end” the “Epstein hoax,” again blaming Democrats for pushing for answers that many of the president’s supporters are also demanding. 

    “The Department of Justice has done its job, they have given everything requested of them,” the president wrote. “It’s time to end the Democrat Epstein Hoax, and give the Republicans credit for the great, even legendary, job that they are doing.”

    Mr. Trump has in recent weeks voiced frustration that members of Congress, including some in his own party, have not given up on pursuing more transparency about the details of the Epstein case

    Democrats are hoping to gain a sufficient number of votes, including from a handful of Republicans, to advance legislation forcing the Trump administration to release all federal Epstein files.


    By Kathryn Watson

     

    Trump expected to issue order on punishing countries that illegally detain Americans

    The Trump administration is expected to issue an executive order as early as Friday establishing a designation for state sponsors of wrongful detention, CBS News has learned, in a move that would allow the U.S. to punish countries that illegally detain U.S. nationals or take them hostage. 

    Modeled after the designation of state sponsors of terrorism, the measure would provide tools for the State Department to penalize nations that use detained Americans as political leverage and potentially issue geographic travel restrictions on where a U.S. passport can be used. 

    Read more here.

    By Camilla Schick, Olivia Gazis


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  • A bad jobs report

    Employers added 22,000 new jobs in August. For those paying attention, this is substantially below what had been forecast.

    The jobs report was released early Friday morning, and it indicated a rising unemployment rate, plus job numbers adjustments for June and July. TLDR: things don’t look great.

    Some silver linings: Though job growth was low, layoffs were also relatively low. That said, people who have been fired or laid off have struggled to get back on their feet: “The number of people with continued unemployment claims has been elevated since April,” reports The New York Times.

    It is very likely now that the Federal Reserve Board will drop interest rates, something they’ve hesitated to do for about the last nine months. But with a struggling labor market, it might be time. (The stock market is reacting fine to all this news; though a bad jobs report isn’t great, an interest rate cut could be good.)

    “Although there’s no evidence of rapidly mounting layoffs, in July the number of unemployed people surpassed the number of available jobs for the first time since the spring of 2021. Job openings have fallen sharply for two months in health care, which has been the main industry driving growth over the past year,” reports The New York Times. “Also in the labor market weakness column: data from the payroll provider ADP, which showed just 54,000 private-sector jobs were added in August. Since the public sector most likely shed jobs last month as the Trump administration continues to fire people, the total number could be lower.”

    One interesting nugget: This month’s report showed 12,000 lost manufacturing jobs, which makes a total of 78,000 lost over the course of this year. If one goal of President Donald Trump’s tariffs was to revitalize domestic manufacturing, it sure doesn’t look like things are going according to plan.


    Scenes from New York: Democratic Mayor Eric Adams, who is seeking reelection in a race against Democratic nominee/frontrunner Zohran Mamdani, hardcore law-and-order Republican Curtis Sliwa, and former Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, has reportedly confided to trusted advisers that he might drop out, having been in talks with the Trump administration recently in Florida.

    It’s also rumored that the administration reached out to Sliwa, in hopes of slimming the race down to just Mamdani vs. Cuomo; Sliwa does not appear interested in taking any Trump offers.

    “I don’t think you can win, unless you have one on one,” said Trump when asked about the mayoral race. “I would like to see two people drop out and have it be one on one. And I think that’s a race.”

    (“Is there any scenario, any, where Curtis Sliwa drops out of this race?” asked radio host Sid Rosenberg of Sliwa yesterday morning. “Yeah, if somebody puts a bullet in the back of my head, and I’m in a casket,” replied Sliwa, who survived a shooting back in ’92.)


    QUICK HITS

    • The Justice Department has opened up a criminal investigation—related to her purported mortgage fraud, as in: declaring two residences to be her primary—into Lisa Cook, a member of the Federal Reserve Board. “The move…was instigated by Ed Martin, a hyperpartisan Trump loyalist with little prosecutorial experience,” reports The New York Times. “He has said that it is legitimate for federal officials to publicly air criminal investigations into people targeted by the president, even if an investigation does not result in a conviction or even an indictment….Martin, who has been given few staff but broad latitude to team up with U.S. attorney’s offices around the country, flouted the department’s procedural norms last month by suggesting to the Fed chairman, Jerome Powell, that Ms. Cook step aside.” “At this time, I encourage you to remove Ms. Cook from your board,” Martin wrote in a letter to Powell last month. “Do it today before it is too late! After all, no American thinks it is appropriate that she serve during this time with a cloud hanging over her.”
    • Inside the tech CEO dinner at the White House (for which Elon Musk was notably absent).
    • Sometime today, the president will sign an executive order renaming the Department of Defense to the Department of War. At least it’s honest!
    • “Since the election, Bluesky has lost ground,” writes Nate Silver at his Substack. “More precise data based on the number of unique ‘likers’, ‘posters’ and ‘followers’ at Bluesky tracks a similar curve, with an initial peak around the election and a secondary peak after Trump’s inauguration but persistent erosion since then. The number of unique posters at Bluesky peaked at just under 1.5 million on Nov. 18, 2024 but has since fallen to an average of about 660,000 on weekdays and 600,000 on weekends: in other words, a drop of more than half.” Silver details what a bubble Bluesky is, disproportionately used by people in D.C. and folks in “crunchy white states like Vermont and Oregon” (lol). But “demographics alone only go so far in explaining Blueskyism, however. It’s not a political movement so much as a tribal affiliation, a niche set of attitudes and style of discursive norms that almost seem designed in a lab to be as unappealing as possible to anyone outside the clique.”
    • Yep:

    Liz Wolfe

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  • Employers added 22,000 jobs in August, falling short of forecasts

    Employers across the U.S. added 22,000 jobs in August, falling short of economists’ muted expectations and signaling the labor market is facing sharp headwinds from mounting economic uncertainty amid the Trump administration’s wide-ranging tariffs. 

    The numbers

    Economists had forecast payroll gains of 80,000 last month, according to a poll by FactSet. 

    Job creation has been slowing this year, with employers hiring an average of 35,000 each month from May through July, versus 168,000 workers each month in 2024. 

    Some companies are paring back hiring plans amid the on-again, off-again uncertainty of the Trump administration’s tariffs, which are import duties paid by U.S. companies. Businesses in seven of the Fed’s 12 regional districts canvassed in the latest so-called Beige Book, a survey of local economic conditions, said they were hesitant to hire because of weaker demand and uncertainty over the near-term outlook. 

    Consumers are also dour, with a new CBS News poll finding that Americans are continuing to rate the U.S. economy negatively, with most respondents picking “uncertain” and “struggling” to describe its current state.

    The August jobs report marks the first since President Trump fired former Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer on Aug. 1 in the wake of a disappointing July jobs report, which included a significant downward revision of May and June hiring figures. 

    Citing the large revisions, Mr. Trump questioned the validity of the government data, although the BLS typically revises its prior reports each month based on fresher responses from employers. 

    What economists say

    The labor market data is complicating the Federal Reserve’s next rate cut decision, which set for Sept. 17. The central bank’s dual mandate requires it to ensure that both inflation and unemployment remain low, but inflation has been edging upward, which economists say is partly due to Mr. Trump’s tariffs. 

    The Fed’s most powerful weapon for battling inflation is to hike interest rates, yet its best option for helping the job market is to lower borrowing costs, making it cheaper for businesses to expand. With the combination of rising inflation and weaker hiring, the Fed is in a tough position, economists say. 

    Last month, Fed Chair Jerome Powell, who has been under pressure from Mr. Trump to cut rates, signaled that the central bank is open to reducing rates at its September meeting, citing risks to the labor market.

    “The August report is shaping up to be one of the more consequential in some time. It will directly affect the Federal Reserve’s decision on whether to cut rates or continue to evaluate the direction of inflation, which is moving in the wrong direction,” Joe Brusuelas, global economist at RSM, said in an email prior the job report. 

    — This is breaking news and will be updated.

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