In mid-December 2025, President Donald Trump gave the U.S. economy a glowing self-assessment of “A-plus-plus-plus-plus-plus.” This came amid delays in key data due to a government shutdown, leaving questions about the true state of jobs and growth. The November jobs report, released on December 16, painted a different picture: weak hiring, rising unemployment, and signs of trouble ahead. While not yet a full recession, the numbers raise concerns about slowdown. This analysis looks at the latest data, the gap between claims and reality, and possible causes.
What Does the Latest Jobs Report Reveal?
The November report showed limited job gains of 64,000, with little overall change since spring. Unemployment rose to 4.6 percent, the highest in over four years, up from around 4.2 percent earlier. A broader measure, including part-time workers and those who stopped looking, reached high levels not seen recently.
The report covered both October and November due to shutdown delays—no October unemployment rate was available for the first time in decades. Long-term unemployment climbed, with nearly 1.9 million out of work for over 27 weeks. Employer surveys suggest official gains may overstate reality by about 60,000 jobs monthly, per some experts.
Blue-collar sectors, often highlighted in campaign promises, fared poorly. Manufacturing and construction showed declines in key areas. Background notes the shutdown affected data collection, leading to higher uncertainty. Related points: The Sahm Rule, a reliable recession signal based on unemployment rises, came close to triggering with estimates. Why these weak signs? Hiring slowed amid policy shifts, though full effects take time. The data point to a labor market losing steam, not collapsing but vulnerable.
Why Do Claims of Strength Clash with the Numbers?
Trump’s high grade contrasts sharply with indicators. The inherited economy had steady growth, low unemployment around 4 percent, and cooling inflation. Now, job adds average far below prior years, and confidence has dipped.
Officials sometimes blame past policies, but changes like tariffs, deportations, tax shifts, and cuts to programs have impacted sectors. Tariffs raised costs for imports, while deportations tightened labor in areas like farming and building. Green projects and aid faced reductions, affecting related jobs.
Parallel views: Studies show populist approaches can lower long-term growth by around 10 percent over 15 years due to unpredictable rules. Why the mismatch? Leaders may highlight positives like stock gains in tech, but everyday measures lag. Public views reflect rising costs despite some relief. Questions arise: Can blame shift hold when direct policies play a role?
How Are Policies Contributing to the Slowdown?
Key actions include broad tariffs to protect industries and fund goals, but they increase prices for goods and inputs. Mass deportations aim at security but reduce workforce in key fields. Tax cuts favor higher earners, while spending trims hit support programs.
Federal layoffs and project pauses added drag. Crypto and AI boomed, but broader effects hit manufacturing and consumer spending. Background: Earlier growth relied on steady trade and investment; disruptions ripple through chains.
Related angles: Inflation eased somewhat, but tariff effects may push it up again. Housing stays costly with high rates. Why own the downside? Policies target long-term shifts, but short-term pain shows in data. Experts note such changes often cause initial weakness before potential gains.
What Lies Ahead for Growth and Confidence?
The report signals early risks, not panic. Recession odds hover around 30-40 percent for 2026, per forecasts. Growth may slow further if trends continue.
Trump planned a national address to highlight progress, likely stressing achievements and future promises. Broader implications: Damage to standards could linger, affecting living levels long-term. Connecting now to future: Adjustments might ease pressures, but consistency matters for recovery.
Will boasts align with outcomes? Coming data, like December jobs in January, will clarify. For now, the gap highlights challenges in turning promises into broad gains, as the economy navigates policy shifts amid global uncertainties.




