Everyday Economics: Stable but weak under the surface

Spread the love

The April jobs report looked fine. Payrolls rose, unemployment held at 4.3%, hours ticked up. Nothing broke. But look one layer down and the picture is different: the three-month average is just 48,000 jobs per month – just enough to keep the unemployment rate from rising. The labor force shrank. Involuntary part-time work jumped 445,000 – nearly half a million people who want full-time work and can’t get it. This cycle’s weakness isn’t appearing in the unemployment rate. It’s appearing in real wages, and underemployment. Those are harder to see in a headline, and easier to dismiss.

That pattern – stable on the surface, softer underneath – runs through everything this week.

Housing is not the mystery this week.

Zillow’s April housing market report already tells you what the NAR existing home sales release will approximate: the national market is moving sideways. Sales down 0.4% from a year ago. Active inventory up 3.7%. No recovery, but no collapse either.

Look past the national number and the cross-section tells a more useful story. In markets where supply improved and prices actually fell, buyers came back. In Austin, existing home sales are up 18% from a year ago. San Antonio up 10.4%. Raleigh 8.8%. Dallas 8%. Denver 7.3%. Every one of those markets posted year-over-year home value declines. The mechanism is consistent: inventory rises, prices adjust, transactions follow. The demand was always there – it was priced out. Where that changed, the market responded.

Most of the country hasn’t seen that adjustment. Prices remain sticky, sellers remain reluctant, and sales remain near the bottom. New construction keeps outperforming resale because builders can cut prices and offer incentives. Most existing homeowners won’t – or can’t.

The bigger question this week is inflation.

Two shocks are in play simultaneously: tariff pass-through into goods and services, and an oil price shock from the Middle East conflict. Tariffs don’t hit all at once – goods prices rise first, services inflation follows as businesses pass costs through. Add higher oil on top, and the next few months could look considerably worse than the underlying economy warrants.

Zillow projects OER inflation slowing to 2.39% and Rent of Primary Residence to 2.15% over 2026, driven by slower rent growth, more supply, and a weak job market. The underlying rental market is cooling. But this month’s Consumer Price Index may not show it.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics normally updates each rental unit in the CPI sample every six months. The October 2025 survey was cancelled entirely by the government shutdown – those values were carried forward from April 2025 instead. When those units update in April 2026, the CPI captures a full year’s worth of rent change compressed into one six-month window. Measured Operating Expense Ratio and Rent of Primary Residence could move sharply higher, not because rents accelerated but because the measurement caught up all at once. The surface will look hot. The underlying market won’t be.

Retail sales will close out the week, and the number to watch isn’t the headline.

Sales rising because prices are higher isn’t a stronger consumer – it’s the same basket of goods costing more. Real disposable income is no longer rising. Gasoline, food and insurance are taking an outsized share of household budgets. What spending remains looks increasingly supported by credit and savings drawdowns rather than income growth. Strong headline, weaker foundation.

That is the economy right now. The unemployment rate is low. Payrolls are positive. Sales are holding. Each of those statements is true – and each one flatters the picture. Underneath, job growth is barely replacement pace, household finances are thinning, and the next inflation print may overstate pressure that isn’t really there. Stable is not the same as strong. This economy is running on fumes that still look like fuel.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois Quick Hits: State police investigating 2025 fatal ICE-involved shooting

Illinois Quick Hits: State police investigating 2025 fatal ICE-involved shooting

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois State Police have begun investigating the fatal shooting of Silverio Villegas Gonzalez last September by a...
Data shows more violent retail thefts, lost sales tax revenue.

Data shows more violent retail thefts, lost sales tax revenue.

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – New data shows that violent retail crime is on the rise, and taxpayers can be counted among...
Data shows more violent retail thefts, lost sales tax revenue.

Data shows more violent retail thefts, lost sales tax revenue.

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – New data shows that violent retail crime is on the rise, and taxpayers can be counted among...
Arizona GOP considers suing to redraw congressional map

Arizona GOP considers suing to redraw congressional map

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square The Republican majority in the Arizona Legislature is contemplating legal options to redraw the state’s congressional map in time for the 2028 elections. Senate President...
Arizona GOP considers suing to redraw congressional map

Arizona GOP considers suing to redraw congressional map

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square The Republican majority in the Arizona Legislature is contemplating legal options to redraw the state’s congressional map in time for the 2028 elections. Senate President...
Arizona GOP considers suing to redraw congressional map

Arizona GOP considers suing to redraw congressional map

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square The Republican majority in the Arizona Legislature is contemplating legal options to redraw the state’s congressional map in time for the 2028 elections. Senate President...
Illinois Quick Hits: Congressman's aide indicted on fraud allegations

Illinois Quick Hits: Congressman’s aide indicted on fraud allegations

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – U.S. Rep. Danny Davis’ deputy director has been indicted on federal fraud charges. Prosecutors say Gerard C....
Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 1.46.14 PM

JJC Board Meeting Halted by Lack of Quorum; New Student Trustee Sworn In

Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees Meeting | April 15, 2026 Article Summary: A lack of a voting quorum forced the Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees to delay all official...
jackson township graphic.2

Jackson Township Outlines Spring Community Outreach, Prepares for Route 66 Centennial

Jackson Township Board Meeting | March 11, 2026 Article Summary: Jackson Township officials announced a robust schedule of spring community initiatives, highlighted by an expanded food basket distribution program and early...
Johnson, municipal leaders statewide clash with Pritzker over local funding cuts

Johnson, municipal leaders statewide clash with Pritzker over local funding cuts

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Mayors and municipalities across Illinois have called on Gov. JB Pritzker to reverse course on local government...
Johnson, municipal leaders statewide clash with Pritzker over local funding cuts

Johnson, municipal leaders statewide clash with Pritzker over local funding cuts

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Mayors and municipalities across Illinois have called on Gov. JB Pritzker to reverse course on local government...
Lincoln Way West Warriors Baseball

Pettit’s Home Run, Late Rally Propel Lincoln-Way West Baseball Past Andrew 5-2

Overcoming a mid-game deficit with a clutch late-inning surge, the Lincoln-Way West varsity baseball team secured a hard-fought 5-2 conference victory over host Andrew on Tuesday afternoon. Trailing 2-1 entering...
Illinois bill would force employers to pay employees regular wages for jury duty

Illinois bill would force employers to pay employees regular wages for jury duty

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Senate is considering legislation that would force employers to pay employees regular wages while they...
Foxx: Prosecutors’ ‘silence’ on murder exonerations doesn’t mean ‘innocent’

Foxx: Prosecutors’ ‘silence’ on murder exonerations doesn’t mean ‘innocent’

By Jonathan Bilyk | :era; NewslineThe Center Square Attorneys for one of two Mexican men who claim they were illegally coerced into confessing to helping murder a Chicago couple to...
Foxx: Prosecutors’ ‘silence’ on murder exonerations doesn’t mean ‘innocent’

Foxx: Prosecutors’ ‘silence’ on murder exonerations doesn’t mean ‘innocent’

By Jonathan Bilyk | :era; NewslineThe Center Square Attorneys for one of two Mexican men who claim they were illegally coerced into confessing to helping murder a Chicago couple to...