Axios Macro

September 08, 2025
After having the weekend to digest last week's economic news, today we step back and look at where the U.S. economy stands — and why there are so many mixed signals in the data. 🧐
- Plus, making sense of fast-moving political, economic, and bond market developments in France. 🇫🇷
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Today's newsletter, edited by Ben Berkowitz and copy edited by Katie Lewis, is 848 words, a 3-minute read.
1 big thing: Powerful winds blowing everywhere
Friday's jobs report was shocking but not surprising. It was a useful lens through which to view the overarching economic reality heading into the final months of 2025.
The big picture: We're living in an economy in which powerful policy winds are buffeting both the supply and demand sides of the economy, each with uncertain magnitudes and lags.
- It makes for unusually high uncertainty about how to interpret incoming data that covers the recent past — and makes forecasting even the near future a perilous exercise.
- In effect, business decision-makers are sailing through a sea in which extreme winds and crosscurrents are pushing in different directions at different moments.
State of play: Tariffs have been raised to a multiple of anything seen in most Americans' lifetimes, raising something like $30 billion a month in taxes that are coming from someone's pockets (U.S. importers, U.S. consumers, and international suppliers being the prime candidates).
- Tax legislation passed in July is designed to encourage a supply-side boost in investment, and includes spending increases on border security and tax cuts for households that will amount to demand-side stimulus in the months ahead.
- Deportations and restrictionist immigration policy mean there are fewer workers in the U.S., a cause of the flatlining in job growth evident in the last two jobs reports. This means both less supply of workers and less demand for the goods and services immigrants purchase (including housing).
- The Federal Reserve has resisted interest rate cuts all year, given the prospect of tariff-driven inflation, but now looks poised to relent in light of the sudden stop in job growth.
Zoom in: That constellation of forces helps explain why the economic data has been sending such mixed signals in recent weeks, with some pointing to recessionary alarm bells and others pointing to things being more or less fine.
- Employers added 123,000 jobs a month in the first four months of the year — but came to a near halt in May, adding only 27,000 jobs a month since then (with June bringing the first negative jobs month in 4 1/2 years).
- The manufacturing sector contracted in August for the sixth consecutive month, the Institute for Supply Management said last week, and anecdotes from its survey respondents pointed to supply chain challenges from tariffs as a major headwind.
Yes, but: The unemployment rate is still a low 4.3%, and weekly jobless claims, perhaps the best real-time indicators of layoff activity, remain subdued.
- GDP growth is tracking at a 3% annual rate in Q3, per the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model.
Zoom out: What does this all mean if you're facing personal or business decisions with economic stakes, like a major purchase or investment?
- In high and unpredictable winds, the best advice for a sailor is to remain calm, make careful, short tacks and avoid oversteering. Heading into year's end, that advice applies more broadly.
2. Vive la Deficit


Fiscal jitters have the French government on the brink of collapse for the second time in less than a year.
Why it matters: What happens in Paris might be a warning to the rest of the world about investors' new aversion to large deficits — and the political crises that come with trying to address it.
Driving the news: French Prime Minister François Bayrou looks unlikely to survive a vote of confidence later this afternoon, with opposition parties rising up against him over unpopular plans for budget cuts.
- France's deficit was 5.8% of GDP last year, the widest in the euro area and almost double the European Union's limit.
- Bayrou's plan — which proposed eliminating two public holidays, sweeping cuts to social welfare programs and tax hikes — was estimated to cut deficits to 4.6% of GDP by 2026.
The big picture: The quest to tame spending in Europe's second-largest economy has been bumpy, even as soaring borrowing costs put pressure on politicians — recalling memories of the euro zone debt crisis in 2012.
- European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde said last week that risk in her home country had increased in recent days.
- Lagarde's comments came as investors demanded the biggest premium this year to hold French 10-year government debt relative to the German equivalent.
What they're saying: In a speech today ahead of the vote, Bayrou said France's debt load was "life-threatening" for the country, France24 reported.
The bottom line: Investors will be watching what happens when a nation is forced to cut government spending at a time when the global economy is already poised to slow from President Trump's trade war.
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