The past two years have been very good for the U.S. economy.
Unemployment has crept up a bit, but not by a lot, and the employed share of Americans in their prime working years is higher than, to make a random comparison, it was at any point during the Trump years.
At the same time, inflation has come way down, defying the pessimistic predictions of many economists.
Here, for example, is a comparison of the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of underlying inflation with a September 2022 prediction from Harvard’s Jason Furman — a widely respected economist whom I single out only because he was both very mainstream and admirably explicit (no good deed goes unpunished), predicting that if unemployment remained low, inflation would still be around 4 percent at the end of 2025:
Persons:
Jason Furman —
Organizations:
Trump, Federal
Locations:
U.S, Unemployment