Marketdash

Economist Wolfers: Forget Stock Prices, Unemployment Shows We're Flirting With Recession

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers says the U.S. has created virtually zero jobs since tariffs began, and rising unemployment matters far more than stock market swings when gauging recession risk.

When it comes to spotting a recession, most people obsess over the stock market's daily drama. But economist Justin Wolfers has a different message: if you want to know whether the economy is actually broken, stop watching your portfolio and start watching the unemployment rate.

The Job Market Has Hit a Wall

Wolfers dropped a sobering assessment over the weekend, pointing to what he calls a hiring freeze that began the moment the Donald Trump administration rolled out its tariff package. Since "Liberation Day"—the official start date for the new tariffs—the American economy has essentially created "close to zero jobs," he said in a video shared on X.

While politicians love debating trade balances and tariff revenue, the University of Michigan professor argues there's a more immediate problem staring us in the face: companies have stopped hiring.

"If you actually look at... when the tariffs came into the present, the US economy has actually created close to zero jobs," Wolfers explained.

And it might be worse than the current numbers suggest. Wolfers predicts that when the next batch of economic data drops, we'll see the economy has actually contracted. The spike in unemployment is sharp enough that "we really are looking at whether we're in a recession," he warned.

Why Your Paycheck Matters More Than Your Portfolio

Here's where Wolfers gets to the heart of things. For all the noise around stock tickers and market indexes, those metrics don't reflect what most Americans actually worry about. The real financial risk for the average person isn't a bad day on Wall Street—it's losing their job.

"Think of your biggest financial risk: it's not your stock portfolio, it's losing your paycheck," Wolfers wrote. When people can't earn a living, whether the Nasdaq is up or down becomes pretty much irrelevant.

He's essentially saying: tune out the background noise. Focus on employment. That's the metric that determines whether you can pay your rent, buy groceries, and keep the lights on.

Workers Lose Leverage When Jobs Disappear

Beyond the headline numbers, Wolfers highlighted something more subtle but equally troubling: what happens to workplace dynamics when the labor market freezes.

When jobs are plentiful, workers have options. They can ask for raises, push back on unreasonable demands, or jump to better opportunities. But when hiring stalls, all that leverage evaporates.

"It is hard to express dissatisfaction with your current job and look elsewhere," Wolfers noted. Workers become trapped. They're "so scared that they stay in the job with a crappy boss" because the alternative—unemployment in a stagnant market—is worse.

It's a miserable position that doesn't show up in GDP figures but affects millions of people's daily lives.

Market Recap: Indices Slip Despite Friday Rally

Last week brought a flood of delayed economic data, and the major U.S. indices spent most of the week sliding lower before recovering somewhat on Friday.

The S&P 500 finished the week down 0.37%, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.10% and the Dow Jones dropped 0.95%.

The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 respectively, both closed higher on Friday. The SPY gained 0.91% to reach $680.59, while the QQQ advanced 1.30% to $617.05, according to market data.

Futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100 indices were trading higher on Monday.

Economist Wolfers: Forget Stock Prices, Unemployment Shows We're Flirting With Recession

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers says the U.S. has created virtually zero jobs since tariffs began, and rising unemployment matters far more than stock market swings when gauging recession risk.

When it comes to spotting a recession, most people obsess over the stock market's daily drama. But economist Justin Wolfers has a different message: if you want to know whether the economy is actually broken, stop watching your portfolio and start watching the unemployment rate.

The Job Market Has Hit a Wall

Wolfers dropped a sobering assessment over the weekend, pointing to what he calls a hiring freeze that began the moment the Donald Trump administration rolled out its tariff package. Since "Liberation Day"—the official start date for the new tariffs—the American economy has essentially created "close to zero jobs," he said in a video shared on X.

While politicians love debating trade balances and tariff revenue, the University of Michigan professor argues there's a more immediate problem staring us in the face: companies have stopped hiring.

"If you actually look at... when the tariffs came into the present, the US economy has actually created close to zero jobs," Wolfers explained.

And it might be worse than the current numbers suggest. Wolfers predicts that when the next batch of economic data drops, we'll see the economy has actually contracted. The spike in unemployment is sharp enough that "we really are looking at whether we're in a recession," he warned.

Why Your Paycheck Matters More Than Your Portfolio

Here's where Wolfers gets to the heart of things. For all the noise around stock tickers and market indexes, those metrics don't reflect what most Americans actually worry about. The real financial risk for the average person isn't a bad day on Wall Street—it's losing their job.

"Think of your biggest financial risk: it's not your stock portfolio, it's losing your paycheck," Wolfers wrote. When people can't earn a living, whether the Nasdaq is up or down becomes pretty much irrelevant.

He's essentially saying: tune out the background noise. Focus on employment. That's the metric that determines whether you can pay your rent, buy groceries, and keep the lights on.

Workers Lose Leverage When Jobs Disappear

Beyond the headline numbers, Wolfers highlighted something more subtle but equally troubling: what happens to workplace dynamics when the labor market freezes.

When jobs are plentiful, workers have options. They can ask for raises, push back on unreasonable demands, or jump to better opportunities. But when hiring stalls, all that leverage evaporates.

"It is hard to express dissatisfaction with your current job and look elsewhere," Wolfers noted. Workers become trapped. They're "so scared that they stay in the job with a crappy boss" because the alternative—unemployment in a stagnant market—is worse.

It's a miserable position that doesn't show up in GDP figures but affects millions of people's daily lives.

Market Recap: Indices Slip Despite Friday Rally

Last week brought a flood of delayed economic data, and the major U.S. indices spent most of the week sliding lower before recovering somewhat on Friday.

The S&P 500 finished the week down 0.37%, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.10% and the Dow Jones dropped 0.95%.

The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 respectively, both closed higher on Friday. The SPY gained 0.91% to reach $680.59, while the QQQ advanced 1.30% to $617.05, according to market data.

Futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100 indices were trading higher on Monday.