Skip to main content

Infrastructure Investment Tanks Under Republican Leadership

Weekly Economic Snapshot 7/10 - 7/14

Economic Facts for this Week

  • With GDP growth of just 1.4 percent in the first quarter of 2017, the TrumpEconomy is falling far short of promised outcomes. The economy will need to average 3.5 percent growth for the remaining 3 quarters of the year to even hit Trump’s least outrageous growth prediction of 3 percent—a feat we have not managed since 2014.
  • In the most recent reading on the economy, 28 states saw job growth slow in May while 22 states saw job losses.
  • 2.9 million rural Americans stand to lose health care coverage by 2020 if the Senate Republicans’ Better Care Reconciliation Act goes through, including 1.7 million who gained coverage from state Medicare expansion.

 

Chart of the Week

 

The U.S. economy needs expanded infrastructure investment to create jobs, reduce costs of doing business, and make our economy more productive. However, public investments in infrastructure and other public fixed assets has plummeted over the last few years, dropping to a low of $274 billion in 2014 from more than $357 billion in 2009 when adjusted for inflation. 

 

ICYMI

  • In a review of the U.S. macroeconomic outlook, the International Monetary Fund, or IMF, warned that the Trump administration and Republican Congress’s policy agenda would disproportionately harm low- and middle-income households and is creating “significant policy uncertainties.”
  • Economists at the Cleveland Fed find that U.S. wealth mobility has been decreasing since the early 1980s. Sixty-three percent of households in the bottom 20 percent of the wealth distribution in 1984 remained at the bottom in 1994, while only 2 percent made it to the top. With equality of opportunity, one would expect about 20 percent of people to remain at the bottom.
  • New research finds that early education programs for disadvantaged youth like Head Start, followed by later complementary investments in K-12 education, can break the cycle of poverty, increasing educational attainment and adult wages and decreasing the probability of incarceration.

                                                                                                              

Coming This Week