“Total nonfarm payroll employment increased by 147,000 in June, and the unemployment rate changed little at 4.1 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Job gains occurred in state government and health care. Federal government continued to lose jobs.” BLS.GOV
We have one more month of employment data to give us an idea where the U.S. economy is headed during the Trump administration. There were 74,000 private payroll jobs and 73,000 state and local government jobs added, and more federal government job losses.
The results of the June unemployment report were strong enough to perhaps discourage any Fed rate cuts until the fall. Trump is outraged at the Fed’s intransigence because he hopes cutting interest rates will boost growth in combination with his big ugly bill that takes attention away from the huge boost in tariffs he requires to help pay for it that will slow growth and raise inflation—i.e., equals stagflation.
An average 130,000 private payroll jobs per month were created in Trump’s first six months (last six bars in above graph). Whereas President Biden created 15.2 million jobs during his four years, or 327,000 jobs per month and GDP growth averaged 3.2 percent over his four-year term.
Democrats have always been better with the budget math, since President Biden focused on recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic with his New Deal legislation while Republicans have been obsessed with cutting back the stimulus programs to pay for the tax cuts for their wealthiest supporters.
Jobs were created in state and local jobs while the federal government lost jobs from the DOGE efficiency drive. So, the question is can state and local governments take up the hiring slack from the shrinking of federal payrolls?
Republicans are about to pass the ugliest federal budget in history that that is projected to add at least $3 trillion to the annual budget deficit and create $38 trillion to total federal debt. Medicaid is the biggest loser with the Congressional Budget Office predicting that some 11 million could lose their Medicaid coverage because of state cut backs on payment subsidies and various new regulation requirements.
It is extremely bad economics to use a worldwide tariff war to attempt to pay for huge budget deficits in the name of more tax cuts that mostly benefit the wealthiest. High tariffs not only disrupt supply chains, as happened during the COVID-19 pandemic because countries attempt to evade the tariffs, but it means alienating friends by treating them as enemies and walling off America from the rest of the world.
That last happened in 1930 and led to the Great Depression. No single country can be self-sufficient in our modern, globalized world. Strength comes with alliances, weakness with alienation and isolation that benefits the few at the expense of the many.
Harlan Green © 2025
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