Kamala Harris’ economic pitch just got a lot more complicated

New York CNN  —  The Biden-Harris administration couldn’t shake the “vibecession” even when the economy was on a tear. It may be even harder now that cracks are forming in the labor market. Americans have been grumpy about the economy for the better part of three years because prices have gone up, and — fairly
Kamala Harris’ economic pitch just got a lot more complicated

New York
CNN
 — 

The Biden-Harris administration couldn’t shake the “vibecession” even when the economy was on a tear. It may be even harder now that cracks are forming in the labor market.

Americans have been grumpy about the economy for the better part of three years because prices have gone up, and — fairly or unfairly — many consumers have blamed the White House. Now, inflation is more or less under control, but that’s also come at a cost: The job market, while still historically strong, is starting to weaken.

Last month, the economy gained just 114,000 jobs, and unemployment rose to 4.3% from 4.1%, largely because of an influx of job seekers re-entering the workforce. It was hardly a disastrous jobs report, but it was a surprisingly abrupt shift from June, when the economy added 179,000, and May, when it added 216,000.

The jobs report was not a disaster, by any stretch, and it’s no guarantee of a looming recession. But it was a surprise, and economists expressed concerns about how quickly the labor market appears to have downshifted.

“We don’t know just how precipitously the labor market is softening, but it seems pretty darn clear that it is softening,” said Heidi Shierholz, president of the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank.

One month isn’t enough to declare a trend, but it’s enough to seriously complicate Vice President Kamala Harris’ economic pitch as the new presumptive Democratic nominee.

For Wall Street, the surprise slowdown was the bitter cherry on top of a sundae of disappointing tech earnings.

“The reason investors are reacting the way they are is because we are back, in many ways, to where we were during the dot-com bubble,” Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research, told me. “And at the same time, it’s just a reminder that investors are no better than hyperactive first-graders playing musical chairs, always trying to out-anticipate the other as to when the music will stop.”

Investors went a little berserk on Friday, sending US stocks down sharply. The Dow shed more than 600 points, or 1.5%. The S&P 500 lost 1.8% and the Nasdaq Composite declined 2.4%, putting the tech-heavy index in correction territory (down 10% from its peak on July 10.).

(In other words, Wall Street may have overreacted because, well, that’s just kinda the way Wall Street does things.)

Until very recently, the labor market had held up unbelievably well under the strain of higher interest rates, which make it harder for businesses to expand. Cracks are beginning to form, though, as jobless claims rise, unemployment creeps higher and fewer people are changing jobs.

Historically, that is a bad sign for the incumbent party. When the unemployment rate falls over the two years before an election, the incumbent tends to win re-election, a recent analysis by Refinitiv shows. Not surprisingly, when the unemployment rate rises before an election, challengers tend benefit.

It’s not a perfect indicator — there have been a handful of exceptions to the trend in the past 64 years — but unemployment has risen 0.8 point over the past two years, and that could create an extra hurdle for Harris.

Republicans have been seizing on Americans’ inflation fatigue to argue against President Joe Biden’s economic policies, while downplaying (or fully ignoring) month after month of blockbuster jobs reports. Now, with inflation coming down, the GOP has fresh material to propel its message that the economy is a shambles, even when it is, by almost all measures, historically strong.

“This jobs report is one of the worst we have ever seen from the Biden-Harris Administration,” Rep. Jason Smith of Missouri said in a statement Friday. “Another dreadful jobs report under the leadership of Biden/Harris,” wrote the Connecticut GOP on X.

For three-plus years, the Biden administration has been able to rebut Republicans’ attacks with a litany of good news from the labor market: wages outpacing inflation, 16 million new jobs, unemployment holding steady under 4%.

Still, poll after poll showed that inflation fatigue was overshadowing just about everything else on voters’ minds. It didn’t matter how much wages went up or how abundant the jobs were — the vibes were bad.

The labor market is still strong, but its strengths have more caveats. And “it’s complicated” isn’t exactly a slam dunk message to woo voters.

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply
Related Posts
Richardson cruises through Olympic 100m heat
Read More

Richardson cruises through Olympic 100m heat

Sha’Carri Richardson launched her bid for Olympic redemption with a comfortable victory in the opening heats of the women’s 100 metres at the Stade de France on Friday. The reigning world champion — aiming to become the first American since Gail Devers in 1996 to win Olympic 100m gold — sailed through her heat in
Bystanders thwart Michigan man’s attempts to kidnap girls in 2 separate incidents, authorities say
Read More

Bystanders thwart Michigan man’s attempts to kidnap girls in 2 separate incidents, authorities say

Two bystanders in Michigan helped a pair of girls escape when a man tried to force them into his car in broad daylight in separate attempted kidnappings, authorities said. The incidents occurred just an hour apart on Tuesday afternoon, according to authorities. In both cases, a bystander intervened and thwarted the alleged kidnapping attempts. Endi
Blinken arrives in Israel for Gaza ceasefire talks
Read More

Blinken arrives in Israel for Gaza ceasefire talks

Blinken arrives in Israel for Gaza ceasefire talks EPA There has only been only one truce in the months-long conflict which has killed thousands US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has arrived in Israel in his latest effort to push for a ceasefire and hostage-release deal in Gaza. His ninth trip to the region since