We’re increasingly of the view that a series of disruptions are masking a very real cyclical U.S. economic slowdown underneath the surface.
November 5, 2025
By Frances Donald, Mike Reid and Carrie Freestone
The U.S. economy seems in many ways an anomaly.
Interest rates are, by many measures, in “restrictive” territory, and yet the unemployment rate remains quite low. The U.S. is in the midst of a historic trade shock with 100-year high tariffs, but inflation impacts appear limited so far. The housing market, historically a solid leading indicator, is experiencing very limited activity on par with the aftermath of the global financial crisis, yet home prices and rents continue to rise.
The answer to the disconnects, in our view, lies in a series of medium- to long-term disruptions that are distorting an economy’s typical responses and muting the standard “economic cycle.”
At the heart of these disruptions are increasingly powerful structural forces that are masking a very real cyclical slowdown underneath. These disruptions make clarity on the U.S. outlook more difficult, but not impossible. They necessitate a shift in the way we think about the business cycle, cyclical versus structural trends, and even the way we absorb monthly economic data.
So, while our current U.S. economic outlook is best characterized as “Stagflation Lite” (growth running too low for comfort coupled with inflation rising somewhat too high for relief), we’re increasingly of the view that the most important economic stories lie beneath the surface of a standard growth forecast like this.
U.S. tariff policy is creating a significant cyclical disruption, but also likely a structural one that is complicating our ability to read the economy.
Cyclically, imports and inventories surged in Q1 and Q2 on tariff front-running, creating large swings in headline gross domestic product, and an “air pocket” between the implementation of tariffs, and its impact on both inflation and jobs. As we covered here, we expect tariffs to push prices higher into 2026, and also weigh on job growth—a “Stagflation Lite”-type impact. Yet the difficulty in reading the size of the inventory overhang in sectors, coupled with atypical accounting by importers, means economists need to reduce convictions in timelines around impact and visibility into 2025 and 2026 forecasts. Our experience with the 2020 pandemic also tells us that inventory disruptions can take years to normalize. If that seems extreme, consider that goods inflation in the U.S. has only now normalized, five years after the inventory shock of 2020.
At the same time, we believe it’s reasonable to assume that structural adjustments in response to a reordering of trade are also happening. Shifting supply chain strategies takes considerable time, but we may be in the early innings of a tanker-sized economic transition. Effectively, that means the manufacturing economy alongside business investment will continue to operate with business-cycle dynamics, but, at the same time, it will be spending and absorbing costs associated with a long-term goal. Disaggregating the two becomes critical, otherwise there’s the risk of misinterpreting all activity as cyclical.
Read more about our view on how tariffs are likely to impact the U.S. economy: Transmission framework: How tariffs will flow through the U.S. economy
It’s always been true that high-income households contribute a disproportionate share of consumption compared to low- and middle-income groups. But, historically, all consumers mostly followed the same economic cycle, and improving economic data generally referred to better conditions for most.
Over the last several years, however, low- and middle-income Americans’ economic circumstances have sharply diverged from their high-income counterparts. The root of the divergence is high-income households have benefited from higher interest rate environments (higher returns on savings), and wealth benefits from surging stock and housing markets. Lower- and middle-income households largely missed out on wealth gains and have also felt larger inflationary burdens as rent and food price increases are disproportionately painful for this group.
The result is a growing divide in sentiment aligned with circumstance between Americans. And with it, a need to read economic data—and the cycle—differently. Notably, soft data (survey data) has seen much less value as a forecasting tool. It effectively oversamples low- and middle-income households over high-income households, who are disproportionate spenders. At the same time, aggregate economic data is also likely overstating the economic circumstances of many Americans. For companies that serve low- and middle-income Americans, this is a critical distinction.
Assessing the labour market and its signals about the underlying economy will increasingly be a precision exercise in isolating the demand for workers against the supply.
Massive and accelerating retirements, coupled with a low immigration policy, are likely to continue to weigh on labour force participation rates, and limit the availability of workers. This tension in the demand versus supply of labour is already visible in 2025 jobs data. Job growth has slowed from an average 168,000 per month in 2024 to 74,000 per month in 2025, and yet the unemployment rate has remained extraordinarily tight by historical standards. The core of the story is a simple, but powerful one: The U.S. economy needs to create fewer jobs for fewer workers.
There are several important implications. Three, in particular, stand out:
Read more about our views on the U.S. labour market: America needs workers, not jobs
By almost every measure, U.S. federal government spending is running at or near all-time highs.
Naturally, this has ushered in concerns about the sustainability of government spending and Washington’s ability to pay for growing debts. These are important concerns, but they aren’t the only considerations. As the size of government grows and spending at these historic levels persists, big government also creates structural disruptions to our readings of the economic cycle.
The U.S. housing market is in a deep freeze, held hostage by the double whammy of 30-year mortgage rates floating around two-decade highs, and the “lock-in” effect of mortgage holders carrying historically low pandemic-era mortgage rates.
The bulk of housing data looks clearly recessionary. For the past three years, the volume of existing home sales has been trending around levels not seen since the global financial crisis, consumer confidence in buying a home is at a record low, along with housing affordability for first-time homebuyers. Historically, this would have been a three-alarm bell for the U.S. economy as housing has historically led the economic cycle. But the sector has dragged on total growth for nine of the past 14 quarters without pulling the broader economy down with it. Meanwhile, in contradiction, home prices are still up.
Part of housing’s disconnect lies in the sector’s decreased interest rate sensitivity—another consequence of an aging population. High interest rates are another barrier in a structural shortage of housing supply. Together, these forces imply a housing economy that is now desynchronized from the business cycle as a whole. It disrupts our standard approach to the sector, and its implications for the broad economy.
Frances Donald is the Chief Economist at RBC and oversees a team of leading professionals who deliver economic analyses and insights to inform RBC clients around the globe. Frances is a key expert on economic issues and is highly sought after by clients, government leaders, policymakers and media in the U.S. and Canada.
Mike Reid is a Senior U.S. Economist at RBC. He is responsible for generating RBC’s U.S. economic outlook, providing commentary on macro indicators, and producing written analysis around the economic backdrop.
Carrie Freestone is an economist and a member of the macroeconomic analysis group. She is responsible for examining key economic trends including consumer spending, labour markets, GDP and inflation.
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