The year is winding down, but the economic debates are heating up. Economists, investors, and politicians are offering sharply different takes on where the economy stands—and where it's headed. Here's what the biggest voices in finance and policy had to say this week.
Krugman Sounds Alarm on K-Shaped Recovery
Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman isn't mincing words. He argues that America has traded an inclusive, worker-friendly recovery for what he calls a "Trump freeze"—a K-shaped economy where the rich keep getting richer while working-class Americans get left behind.
Krugman's analysis challenges the idea that economic inequality is just baked into the system. He points to Atlanta Fed data showing a rare "Great Compression" during the Biden presidency, suggesting that policy choices actually matter when it comes to who benefits from growth.
O'Leary's Inflation Warning on Stimulus Checks
"Shark Tank" star Kevin O'Leary is raising red flags about the proposed $2,000 "tariff dividend" checks tied to the so-called Trump Accounts initiative. O'Leary calls it "helicopter money"—the kind of direct cash injection that could reignite the inflation fight just when the Federal Reserve thought it was making progress.
His concern? If you dump that much cash into the economy at once, inflation could spike back toward the 9% levels that made 2022 so painful for consumers.
Bessent Says Private Sector Is Booming
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent sees things differently. He claims the private economy is accelerating sharply under President Donald Trump, with real economic output expanding once you strip out government activity. According to Bessent, this represents the "exact opposite" of what happened during the Biden administration.
It's a narrative clash that underscores how differently people interpret the same economic data depending on what they choose to measure.
Wolfers: Watch Unemployment, Not Stocks
Economist Justin Wolfers is urging Americans to focus on the right indicators. Rising unemployment—not stock market gyrations—is the real warning sign of economic trouble ahead, he argues. While Wall Street volatility grabs headlines, joblessness is what actually signals a potential recession.
It's a reminder that the stock market and the economy aren't quite the same thing, even though they often get conflated in public discussion.
Sanders Calls Out Wealth Inequality
Senator Bernie Sanders continues his long-running critique of America's wealth gap, calling the current level of inequality "immoral and unsustainable." He points to the explosive growth in billionaire fortunes as evidence that the system is rigged in favor of the ultra-wealthy.
Whether you agree with his diagnosis or not, the numbers are hard to ignore: wealth concentration has accelerated dramatically in recent years, fueling political tensions across the spectrum.




