cover of episode Uncertainty is a certainty

Uncertainty is a certainty

2025/3/6
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AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
A
April Hemmes
A
Aria Jachin
B
Blarina Aruchi
D
Daniel Ackerman
E
Erica Groschen
G
Gary Schlossberg
G
Guy Berger
J
Joellen DePacquibo
J
Jordan Anthony Brown
K
Kyle Rizdahl
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Louise Shainer
M
Marshall Reinsdorf
M
Michelle Evermore
R
Ron Hetrick
S
Samantha Fields
S
Sean Steigerwald
Topics
Kyle Rizdahl: 我认为政府经济数据对于我们理解当前经济状况以及未来走向至关重要,它能帮助人们了解经济形势,并为商业决策和政策制定提供依据。 然而,商务部解散了两个帮助确保政府经济数据真实反映经济状况的专家咨询小组,这引发了人们对未来联邦数据可靠性的担忧。 Erica Groschen对此表示震惊,她认为这一决定是突然的,没有任何预兆。 Marshall Reinsdorf认为,解散这些委员会不仅会降低政府的透明度,还会减少顶尖经济学家对政府经济数据的贡献,这些委员会为专家们提供了一个与政府沟通的渠道,并向更广泛的社会群体传达信息。 Louise Shainer则认为,解散这些委员会是一个错误,它会导致政府收集的数据质量随着时间的推移而下降,从而影响到对GDP、生产力、就业和通货膨胀等问题的解答。 April Hemmes: 特朗普总统关于关税的政策变化给农民带来了巨大的不确定性和损害。关税不仅影响到农业生产者,还会损害消费者利益。 此外,农业社区目前状况比之前更糟,因为利率上升,生产成本也大幅增加。特朗普总统关于只销售国内产品的言论缺乏现实性,因为美国农产品大量依赖出口,国内市场无法在短期内替代国际市场。 政府帮助农民寻找市场的机制正在被逐渐拆除,这使得农民面临更大的挑战。人们不理解美国国际开发署(USAID)在帮助农民方面所做的工作,这令人沮丧。 尽管面临诸多挑战,但我仍然会继续从事农业,希望其他年轻的农民也能渡过难关。 Blarina Aruchi: 十年期国债收益率下降是好坏消息并存的:降低了借贷成本,但也暗示经济可能正在走弱。 十年期国债收益率下降的部分原因是人们对经济增长前景的不确定性日益增加,关税、消费者信心下降和零售额下降都会对经济增长造成影响。 十年期国债收益率下降意味着家庭和企业的借贷成本降低,但也可能是经济正在走弱的信号。 Gary Schlossberg, Daniel Ackerman: 对服务业的两个调查结果存在差异,这反映了经济数据的不确定性和复杂性。 对服务业的调查结果差异可能源于调查对象、调查时间和调查方法的不同。每月一次的数据发布可能不足以捕捉经济的动态变化,需要关注高频数据。 两个服务业调查都表达了对关税潜在影响的担忧。 Samantha Fields, Michelle Evermore, Guy Berger, Ron Hetrick: 近期的数据表明,劳动力市场可能正在软化。持续领取失业救济金的人数增加表明,失业人员再就业变得更加困难。 经济中的不确定性很高,这使得企业难以做出决策。当前的经济环境使得许多企业选择暂停扩张或招聘。 Joellen DePacquibo, Jordan Anthony Brown, Sean Steigerwald, Aria Jachin: 尽管面临经济挑战,许多企业家仍在积极创业。 Joellen DePacquibo选择经营流动咖啡车是为了改善工作与生活平衡,并降低运营成本。高成本是许多企业面临的挑战,流动咖啡车能帮助她降低成本。 Jordan Anthony Brown的餐厅提高价格以应对食品和工资成本上涨,并满足顾客对高档餐饮体验的需求。 Sean Steigerwald创办软件公司是基于对人工智能应用前景的判断。 Aria Jachin的公司提供DIY技能培训,以帮助人们应对通货膨胀和经济不确定性。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The Commerce Department dissolved two expert advisory groups that ensured the reliability of government economic data. This decision raises concerns about the accuracy of future data on crucial economic indicators like housing, job market, inflation, GDP, productivity, and jobs, potentially impacting policymaking and business decisions.
  • The Commerce Department disbanded the Federal Economic Statistics Advisory Committee and the Bureau of Economic Analysis Advisory Committee.
  • These committees provided expert advice and ensured government transparency.
  • The decision raises concerns about the accuracy and reliability of future economic data.

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I say this in the most macroeconomic and analytical way possible. What is crypto?

happening from American public media. This is Marketplace. In Los Angeles, I'm Kyle Rizdahl. It is Wednesday today, the 5th of March. Good as always to have you along, everybody.

While there is, of course, a limit to what government economic data can tell you, the federal statistical apparatus is the go-to for information on housing and the job market and inflation and much, much more. Data that helps people understand where the economy is and where it might be going and data that informs business decisions and helps policymakers make policy.

I say all that because the Commerce Department has disbanded two groups that help make sure the government's economic data paints a realistic picture of what is going on. The Federal Economic Statistics Advisory Committee and the Bureau of Economic Analysis Advisory Committee have been around for decades. Marketplace's Kaylee Wells explains what happens now that they're gone.

Erica Groschen had no idea this was coming. This came out of the blue. Nothing up until I got the email yesterday. And she was on one of the committees. The economic advisor at Cornell University was told that the decades-old committee was getting disbanded because its purpose had been fulfilled. You don't fulfill an ongoing mission by canceling this communication mechanism.

That mission? To get a bunch of experts at the top of their economic fields to help the government. When the Bureau of Economic Analysis wants to develop a new methodology or maybe go into a new area where they haven't been before, they can run their ideas by the committee. Retired economist and committee member Marshall Reinsdorf says advice was one major benefit. The other was government transparency. The committees opened their doors to the public.

It gives them a chance to reach out and get their message out to a broader community. Getting rid of these two committees doesn't save much money, mainly because the members weren't getting paid, says former committee chair David Wilcox with Bloomberg Economics and the Peterson Institute for International Economics. So we're talking about eight plane tickets twice a year, one night at a non-fancy hotel. This was really inexpensive stuff. And

And he says it was money well spent. Former committee chair Louise Shainer with the Brookings Institution says with less input, the data that the government gathers will get worse over time. And that data is supposed to provide answers on GDP and productivity and jobs and inflation. Depending on what question you're asking, you're going to go to the data. And if the data are not good, your answers to those questions...

or else I'm not going to be good. Shainer says disbanding the committees was a mistake. We asked the government for a response, but the Bureau of Economic Analysis didn't provide a comment and the Commerce Department didn't respond to our request.

I'm Kaylee Wells for Marketplace. One messes with economic data at one's peril. Wall Street today. What is happening in deed? As you've likely heard, President Trump has changed his mind on tariffs. Kinda and only a little bit. Cars and trucks from Canada and Mexico get a reprieve, but only for a month. Traders, though, took the win where they could get it. Details, numbers, y'all know the drill.

While the pause in car and truck tariffs is indeed good news for Ford and GM and Stellantis, spare a thought, would you, for the American farmer. Not only are there the rest of those tariffs on Mexico and Canada that we need to affect yesterday, China as well, there are tariffs looming next month that the president promised yesterday will affect farmers' exports. So we, of course, thought it was a good time to give April Hemmes a call. She is our corn and soybean farmer in Iowa. Hi, April.

Hello. How are you today? Well, I'm fine, but it's not about me. It's about you. Yeah, we've got a full-blown snowstorm going on here in Iowa. It's great. Well, rain in L.A., what can I tell you? Yeah, there you go. I want to know what you're thinking about...

gestures wildly here, the news and everything. Everything? Yeah. Wow. Well, like I heard a TV guy say, just as soon as I say this, something's going to change. And it's so true. I got the social media, whatever that the president sent out to farmers and, you know, it's going to hurt, but it's going to be fun. And all I have to say is his definition of fun is,

way different than the farmer's definition because tariffs are not fun. Let's talk about that for a minute. First of all, this is not your first rodeo with tariffs and President Trump, right? It wasn't fun last time. Are you more prepared this time somehow? Uh,

Well, like I say, same song. It's not the second verse. It's a whole chorus this time because he's including Mexico and Canada and the consumers are going to get hurt. Usually it's the ag people that get hurt, but now it's going to be a lot more of the consumer things.

But more prepared, no. Actually, we in the ag community are worse off now because the interest rates are higher than they were before and our cost of production is way up.

But it's an interesting world we have out there. It is indeed. And then this, so there was a speech last night and, you know, it's, there's going to be disturbance, but we're okay with that. Although I don't think he probably called you to check if you were okay with that. The other thing he did yesterday on social was get ready to sell only domestically starting April 2nd. And that doesn't seem to me to make a whole bunch of sense.

No, I'm glad you said that. Yeah, 60% of our soybeans are exported. 20 to 25% of our corn is exported. So you don't build those markets domestically overnight. We just can't. And you have to build plants and things like that. There's a whole lot that goes into it. So it's not going to happen overnight. And I've heard some farmers say,

with farmers that said, oh, it's okay if these tariffs only last a couple months, but if it's more than that, it's not okay. And I went, pull your head out of the sand, buddy. It's going to last more than that. Yeah. I talked to a guy the other day who used to run, because it's about to be shut down, something called the Soybean Innovation Lab at the University of Illinois. And that, of course, in the middle of that conversation, I got to thinking about you and soybeans and

And just the work that the government does or has done in building markets for all y'all, and all y'all means like all American farmers, right? Yeah, you sound like a southerner now. You're kind of scaring me there. Well, I went to school in Atlanta, you know. It was a long time ago. Oh, well, there you go. But that's kind of what's going on here, too, right? The mechanisms by which you all find markets is being dismantled.

Right. I never hardly engage on Twitter X or whatever it's called now. Smart woman. Smart woman. But, well, yeah. But there's these people out there that are smack talking USAID only thinking it's USDA. And I've been on two USAID trips.

trips to Uganda. Yeah. And did great work there. And people don't understand the work and then the products they buy from farmers to feed the world. So it's very disheartening to see all of this going on.

You and I have been talking for a long time. And every now and then, just like today, actually, I ask you why you do it. But this does seem to be a turning point. And I will say this to you only because I've met you and we've been talking for a while. Drove my combine. Yeah, I did drive your combine. You ain't no spring chicken. And I guess I wonder if there's a point at which this could get so bad that

that you would just say, the heck with it. I'm done. I'm out. I'm going to sell off. Yeah. No, I have had...

This is my 40th year farming. I'm going to be planting my 40th crop, and I'm very proud of that. You know, so I have seen the ups and downs. And what we're going through now is, what did they call it? A revolution. Elon, the president and Mr. Musk want to be revolutionaries. Well, you know, we'll see. Hopefully this is better for everyone, but it's...

I don't know. I think my farm will weather this. I just hope other younger farmers get through this. It's very, it is very scary. But I mean, I had a grandpa who lived to be 101 years old. And you think of what, yeah, he started farming with three horses and lived to have an auto steer tractor. So that really is my guiding light. You know, he went through a lot and this farm will go through more, but I'll still be here.

Thanks, April. We'll talk to you soon. You bet. Take care. I will, in a couple of minutes, give you the yield on the 10-year Treasury note, as I do nearly every day, because the 10-year and the bond market generally can give you a good sense of what's going on in this economy. It's a benchmark that affects everything from how much you'll pay for a mortgage to a car loan to a business investment.

A couple of weeks ago, we told you Treasury Secretary Scott Besant had said he wants the yield on the 10-year to go down. And as of today, it's off more than a half a percentage point since mid-January, a pretty steep drop in a pretty short period of time. Well, this is good news, bad news package. Susan Wachter is a professor of real estate and finance at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. The good news is what happens to the overall cost of money, interest rates, when the 10-year yield drops.

Mortgage rates are declining substantially, and the reason they are is because the 10-year Treasury is declining as well. Which, if you're trying to buy a house... I, unlike my family members, have a very high interest rate on my mortgage. Okay.

Nicole Cervé is an economist with Wells Fargo. For people like her who bought houses in the past couple of years with a plan to refinance or who maybe can't afford to buy in the current environment, rates coming down is a good thing. But the reasons that the rates are coming down really matter.

Do I think that the drivers of the 10-year Treasury yield today are what the administration would like to see? Likely not. The drivers of that decline are where the bad news comes in. Here's Blarina Aruchi, chief U.S. economist at T. Rowe Price. One of the factors driving it lower is this growing uncertainty about the outlook for growth and this growing sense that a growth scare is

is emerging in the U.S. economy. Tariffs, like April Hemmes was just talking about a couple of minutes ago, weakening consumer confidence as well, falling retail sales, all of those things could weigh on economic growth. Case in point, the Atlanta Fed's estimate of first quarter GDP that I think I mentioned the other day is the lowest it's been since early in the pandemic.

I think we're likely to get a few months of soft data, both in terms of how the economy is growing, but also how the labor market is doing. Speaking of the labor market, jobs report on Friday. Not sure I've mentioned that.

So I think the growth scare narrative is partly driving the 10-year yields lower. Slower growth expectations mean that the Fed can cut or might be forced to cut interest rates down the road. I think that's definitely part of the story. So do treasury yields coming down mean cheaper borrowing for households and businesses? Absolutely, yes.

However, could that also be a sign that the economy is weakening? Also, absolutely yes. Coming up. I could kind of order just what I need rather than things in bulk. Entrepreneurs getting it done. First, though, let's us do the numbers.

Yeah, the really happy music today. Dow Industrials up 485 points on that tariff news, 1.1%. 43,006. The NASDAQ added 267 points, 1.5%. 18,552. The S&P 500 climbed 64 points, 1.1%.

58 and 42. Ford Motor Company accelerated 5.8% today. Stellantis increased 9.2%. General Motors revved up 7.2% today. In earnings out today, Dine Brands Global, parent company of Applebee's and IHOP, reported slightly lower revenue than the same quarter last year, but still strong. Dine Brands doubled up 3.4% today. Brinker International, which owns Chili's,

Chilled, 1.5%. Cheesecake Factory dipped just a tad, a tenth of 1%. Bonds fell, and thus, as promised, the yield on the 10-year T-note, 4.28%. You're listening to Marketplace.

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This Marketplace podcast is supported by Remarkable. If you're struggling to stay focused without all the distractions, the Remarkable paper tablet might be exactly what you're looking for. It's everything you love about paper, but with the power of modern technology to help you take better notes, to stay focused, get organized, and to work smarter. The third generation of Remarkable is thin, minimalist, and

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Remarkable Paper Pro is built to keep you in the zone. Try Remarkable Paper Pro for up to 100 days with a satisfaction money-back guarantee. Head over to Remarkable.com to learn more and grab your Remarkable Paper Pro today. This is Marketplace. I'm Kai Risdahl. Painting in very broad strokes here, this economy has two distinct parts to it. The goods part, stuff that we make and sell and buy, and

And services, haircuts, your accountant, things like that. We gave you an update on the goods sector the other day, manufacturing specifically. That update was distinctly mixed. Today, the services sector, two surveys came out this morning, one from the Institute for Supply Management, ISM, the other from S&P Global. ISM showed growth. S&P Global, though, said services are worryingly weak. That's a quote. One sector, two surveys, two seemingly different outcomes.

What gives, you ask? Here's Daniel Ackerman. Here's what Steve Miller of ISM says about his group's optimistic survey. It's some healthy, healthy improvement. And here's what Chris Williamson of S&P Global says about his group's pessimistic survey. It's now reporting the weakest output growth since November 2023. There are a few things that could be causing this discrepancy, including who's answering the surveys.

Gary Schlossberg with Wells Fargo Investment Institute says the ISM survey is mostly of corner office type purchasing and supply executives. The SP Global number, they also survey people on the shop floor, so it's a little closer to the action. Then there's the question of when you're surveying these people.

The Glass Half Full ISM report allowed companies to respond throughout February. The Glass Half Empty S&P survey only took answers in the second half of the month, when markets were dropping and tariffs were looming. Especially at times like this, things can look good early in the month.

and collapse late in the month. So Schlossberg says once a month data drops aren't always enough to keep up. It's for that reason we keep an eye on the high frequency data to corroborate what we're seeing in the monthly numbers. Data including weekly reports on retail sales and mortgage applications.

There was at least one common thread between the two surveys, which Steve Miller of ISM and Chris Williamson of S&P Global both noted. There's a lot of concern around potential tariff impact. This tariff impact, what's that going to mean for us? With those tariffs actually in effect now, next month's surveys could have answers everyone agrees on. I'm Daniel Ackerman for Marketplace.

It's been mostly lost in the tariff firehose, but this is a big week for the labor market. The February jobs report comes on Friday. First-time claims for unemployment benefits are tomorrow. Remember, they were up a bunch last week. Today, the payroll processing company ADP said private sector hiring slowed to its lowest level since July and that small businesses cut jobs last month. Marketplace's Samantha Fields has more on that.

This week, Elizabeth Pancotti at the Groundwork Collaborative is not excited for Friday, Jobs Day. I'm not expecting a rosy jobs report. Recent federal layoffs aren't even the reason. It's too soon for most of them to show up. But all the data points coming out lately, from ADP, unemployment claims, consumer sentiment surveys, they are coming together to tell a similar story, that there is a considerable risk for softening in the labor market.

Some softening has already been showing up. Michelle Evermore at the National Academy of Social Insurance has been seeing it in one of the indicators she keeps tabs on, continued weekly unemployment claims. That means people who are unemployed and continue to file claims after they become unemployed. That number has been rising, which indicates it's getting harder for people who get laid off to find jobs.

This cooling is partly something the Federal Reserve engineered, as it raised interest rates to try to bring inflation down and try to steer the economy to a soft landing. And I think we kind of stuck the landing, but I think that there's been a lot of new uncertainty in the past month or two. Almost every economist I've talked to lately has used that word, uncertainty. Guy Berger at the Burning Glass Institute says that's because... Uncertainty is disruptive and it's very high right now.

For instance, are tariffs happening or not? Is billions in federal spending frozen or not? We don't exactly know, even when policies are implemented, exactly how they're going to be implemented. And if you're an employer, that's a tough landscape to operate in. Ron Hetrick at Lightcast says for many businesses, it's easier right now to just pause. If you were a company and you were saying, I'm looking to expand or I'm looking to hire, you would have investors in those companies saying, are you crazy?

And saying this is not the environment to do that in. I'm Samantha Fields for Marketplace. One of the really interesting side effects of the pandemic, we're talking back in 2020, 2021 here, was the number of new businesses that people were starting. For more than two years, and this data is from the Census Bureau, what are formally called business formations were off the charts. A lot of that was people having lost their old jobs or working from home with some extra, shall we say, time on their hands.

Or maybe just thinking about a different life they might want to live. Also, not to be forgotten, all that pandemic relief money floating around out there. You fast forward five years, most everything else in this economy is back to where it was in the before times, except for those new business applications. Entrepreneurs are still on a tear, and a lot of them are starting businesses that are adapted to post-pandemic realities. Marketplace's Justin Ho has more on that.

Joellen DePacquibo is whipping up some drinks inside the coffee van she owns and operates in Ojai, California. All right, here's the cinnamon oat matcha with honey.

Deepak Akibo launched the business less than a year and a half ago after moving here with her wife and newborn from San Francisco, where she still owns a brick-and-mortar cafe called Pinhole Coffee. Deepak Akibo says a big reason she decided to run her new business out of a van was to improve her work-life balance. I can pop up whenever I want to and not have to open up every single day and still have time to be with my child.

Running it out of a van also helps Deepak Akibo deal with a post-pandemic reality that's weighing on a lot of businesses. High costs. Deepak Akibo says she pays her employees about $20 an hour, plus tips. And then there's the cost of milk and coffee beans. She says those pressures affect both of her businesses. But the van's overhead is much lower. It only has one full-time employee other than her. And she doesn't need to stockpile as many supplies.

I'm just buying less milk at a time, less disposables, less coffee. I could kind of order just what I need rather than things in bulk. Meanwhile, in Cincinnati, Jordan Anthony Brown has been running a new business with much higher overhead. It's a sit-down restaurant called The Aperture.

We're settling into our identity a little bit and definitely more of upscale, casual, kind of bordering on fine dining in terms of price point. Anthony Brown says he recently raised his prices from around $65 a person for dinner a year ago to $80 or $90 today. Part of that was to cover the rising costs of food and wages. But he says it also reflected another post-pandemic reality. People want a fine dining experience. Many of them are older and they're comfortable paying those prices.

You know, we have a lot of kind of business people come in, a lot of private bookings for business dinners that we're starting to see. And a lot of people in the neighborhood are definitely kind of in that 60, 70 range. And they just have more disposable income. As a result, Anthony Brown says he's happy spending more on overhead. He's buying more expensive ingredients to justify his prices. And he says he's paying competitive wages starting at $21 an hour. The goal is to make sure his 25 or so employees are happy.

It's the number one reason why we look to maintain a strong culture, because that trickles down, you know, as the saying goes, happy employees make for, you know, happy guests. Other aspects of the post-pandemic economy have inspired entrepreneurs to start businesses.

I've been really inspired by what was happening in AI and then kind of found this application that I thought there was an opportunity for. That's Sean Steigerwald. He started a software company a couple years ago called Customer IQ. It uses AI technology to help businesses record and summarize meetings, emails, and other forms of communication.

I did ask myself the question, like, fast forward 10, 15 years, do we have more online meetings or less? And I thought it was a pretty safe bet that we'd have the same or more. Many of the economic challenges people have faced during and since the pandemic prompted Aria Jachin to start their company about a year and a half ago. It's called MakeWiTh Hardware and Learning Center in Portland, Oregon, and it teaches people a wide range of do-it-yourself skills.

We offer workshops on things like drywall repair, on refinishing furniture, sharpening knives, how to change a tire, how to change your oil. The courses cost roughly $50 to $250. Jockin says learning these kinds of skills can be helpful for people who've struggled amid high inflation.

economic uncertainty, and climate-related challenges, especially women, queer and trans folks, and people of color. There are barriers in employment. There are barriers to housing. There are so many different kinds of barriers that folks are facing to gaining economic stability. Jockin says if the business goes well, one day they hope to expand by opening a hardware store. I'm Justin Ho for Marketplace. ♪

This final note on the way out today, first of all, a hat tip to occasional guest on this program, Wendy Edelberg. The Fed's Beige Book came out today, 49 pages long, tariffs mentioned 49 times, uncertainty 45 times. Also, just to follow up from yesterday, if perhaps you took your time deciding whether to bid on almost 1.8 million square feet of office space in our nation's capital, you're going to have to

Too bad, so sad. The General Services Administration has now taken the J. Edgar Hoover Building, headquarters of the FBI, off its non-core property list. The Justice Department Building and the Department of Agriculture, many others were on the list as well. All of the now, I guess, core properties? Don't know.

Our media production team includes Brian Allison, Jake Cherry, Justin Duller, Drew Johnstatt, Gary O'Keefe, Charlton Thorpe, Juan Carlos Torado, and Becca Weinman. Jeff Peters is the manager of media production. And I'm Kai Risdell. We will see you tomorrow, everybody. This is APM. If you want to be savvy about the economy, the Marketplace newsletter is just what you need.

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