Amid high consumer uncertainty surrounding inconsistent tariff policy, widespread government layoffs, and cuts to social programs, the Trump administration has openly acknowledged the likelihood of imminent economic downturn, positing the idea that temporary hardship will eventually give way to a “Golden Age.”
“But that’s not how economies work,” writes Alí R. Bustamante, director of Roosevelt’s worker power and economic security program. “Recessions don’t set the stage for prosperity; they cause long-term damage that even a decade of growth can’t fully undo.”
As we saw firsthand during the 2008 financial crisis and in the years that followed, recessions and their ripple effects cause real harm to all areas of people’s lives:
- Small businesses collapse while the biggest corporations consolidate power.
- Unemployment soars, forcing workers to take worse jobs for lower pay.
- Public institutions—like schools, health care, and infrastructure—that enable long-term economic growth are weakened.
At the same time, the current policy trajectory will only exacerbate the harm to everyday people:
- The Trump administration’s whiplash-inducing tariff agenda would raise prices for consumers and manufacturers alike, increasing inflation while slowing down economic activity.
- Mass layoffs of government workers would gut essential public services, hurting businesses that rely on those workers’ paychecks.
- Cutting Medicaid and Social Security would push millions into poverty, reduce consumer spending, and force older Americans to stay in the workforce longer, crowding out younger workers.
“The Trump administration’s vision is clear: force a recession, break the public sector, and weaken social protections, all hoping that something better will emerge on the other side,” Bustamante concludes. “But history has shown us what actually happens—higher inequality, lower wages, and an economy rigged even further in favor of the ultrawealthy. Economic downturns don’t just disappear once the pain subsides; they leave behind long-term damage.”
Read more: “Recessions Don’t Build Golden Ages—They Destroy Lives and Futures”
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