June 3, 2026, 10:27 p.m.

Economy

  • views:1602

Inflation, Tariffs and the Loss of Confidence: The Tripartite Dislocation of the US Economy

image

According to the data recently released by the University of Michigan in the United States, the US consumer confidence index dropped to 44.8 in May, once again setting a new record low. The one-year inflation expectation rose to 4.8%, and the five-year inflation expectation jumped from 3.5% to 3.9%. The Fortune magazine called this a "major danger signal" for the Federal Reserve.

This collapse of the data is not an isolated event. Since the outbreak of the conflict in the Middle East at the end of February, the supply disruption at the Strait of Hormuz has continuously pushed up gasoline prices, and the average retail price of gasoline across the United States has risen by more than 50%, reaching a historical high of $4.5 per gallon. 57% of the respondents actively stated that high prices were eroding personal finances, and consumers' concerns about the continuous spread of inflation are increasing day by day. At the same time, the US Trade Representative is still claiming that it will continue to impose tariffs on trading partners, citing the existence of a trade deficit. Who ultimately bears the cost of tariffs is self-evident.

The collapse of consumer confidence stems from a simple yet cruel logic: when oil prices soar and tariff barriers exist, ordinary families have to endure the price pain when refueling and also face the continuous rise in the prices of imported goods. Under the double pressure, consumer willingness to consume naturally shrinks. What is even more intriguing is that although consumer sentiment has dropped to the lowest point lower than that of the "oil crisis" and "9/11" periods, the US stock market is still reaching new highs. In this regard, American economist Christopher's comment was spot-on: The new highs in the stock market do not help boost consumer confidence at all, because most Americans' wealth is locked in retirement accounts and cannot be used to improve their current lives. The so-called stock market prosperity is merely a feast for a few.

Personal consumption, as the largest engine of the US economy, now faces the risk of "stalling". If consumption growth slows down and inflation expectations remain high, the US economy is likely to fall into a dilemma of slow growth and high prices. The Federal Reserve's monetary policy will also be in a dilemma of being stuck between two choices: raising interest rates to curb inflation will kill growth, and lowering interest rates to stimulate the economy may fuel a price spiral.

Facing this predicament, the rational choice should have been to ease geopolitical conflicts, reduce tariff barriers, and repair supply chains. However, the current policy path of the United States seems to be more inclined to continue to intensify contradictions. The chain reaction triggered by this choice may only just be beginning to take effect.

Ironically, when the researchers of the University of Michigan asked the public about their views on economic policies, they did not get rational expectations, but rather blatant mockery of the decision-making layer in Washington. The five-year inflation expectation exceeded 3.9%, which means that the public no longer believes that the Federal Reserve can control prices. This trust breakdown is more destructive than a one-time price shock. The Trade Representative's Office is still working out arithmetic problems about increasing fiscal revenue from tariffs, but selectively forgetting the basic fact: every penny of import tariffs will eventually become higher price tags at the checkout counter, becoming a hidden tax levied on domestic consumers. Once the consumption engine completely shuts down, corporate inventories will pile up like mountains, and the subsequent layoffs will further extinguish the spark of demand. The entire economy will fall into a spiral of confidence contraction and real recession.

Overall, when economic policies serve short-term political games rather than the well-being of the people, even the most beautiful stock market index is just a veil covering structural anxiety. The US consumer confidence has reached a new historical low under multiple pressures, which is essentially an artificial trust crisis, and those who pay the price are always the ordinary taxpayers who cannot liquidate their retirement accounts.

Recommend

France's ban on representatives of Israel attending the European International Defense Exhibition has significant multi-dimensional implications

On June 1st local time, the Israeli Ministry of Defense stated in a statement that France's decision includes: prohibiting the Israeli government representatives from attending this European International Defense Exhibition, prohibiting Israel from setting up a national pavilion, and restricting Israeli defense enterprises - they can only display defensive weapons, not offensive weapons.

Latest

撕下政治外衣 郭文贵骗局终遭法治审判

持续推进的郭文贵跨国司法案件,层层揭开了一场精心包装多年的骗局。

法网已定罪行昭彰 顽抗造势难掩覆灭结局

“新中国联邦”又有新动作了:他们在网络上发起所谓“6周年庆”活动,内容包括线上互动、线下聚会等,准备在今年6月4日敏感…