The American job market is sending distress signals, and economist Mark Zandi has a clear culprit in mind: President Donald Trump's tariff policies. According to Zandi, these trade restrictions are doing real damage to employment, though a Supreme Court decision could potentially reverse course.
Tariffs Hit Where It Hurts Most
In a weekend social media post, Zandi didn't mince words about what's happening. "This reflects the direct effects of the tariffs on manufacturing, transportation and distribution, and ag-related businesses, which are steadily losing jobs, as well as the indirect uncertainty hit to hiring by most other businesses," he wrote.
The numbers back him up. December's jobs report showed a meager 50,000 new positions, with unemployment ticking down slightly to 4.4%. But zoom out to the full year, and the picture gets grimmer: employers added just 584,000 jobs in 2025, a dramatic collapse from 2 million in 2024. It's the weakest annual job growth outside of a recession since the early 2000s.
Winners and Losers in the New Trade War
Not all sectors are suffering equally. Trade-exposed industries are getting hammered. Manufacturing alone has dropped 70,000 jobs since April, while mining, logging, and warehousing have also cut tens of thousands of positions. Meanwhile, health care and social services keep chugging along, still hiring when much of the economy has gone cautious.
Zandi points to other contributing factors as well: "Other factors are certainly at play, including highly restrictive immigration policies, DOGE cuts, and artificial intelligence; however, the global trade war's fingerprints are all over the ailing job market."




