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In this final interview of 2025, economist Justin Wolfers from the University of Michigan delivers a scathing assessment of Trump's first year back in office, grading the administration's economic performance as "incomplete" due to profound institutional damage. (06:30) While acknowledging that hard economic outputs like unemployment and inflation aren't catastrophic yet, Wolfers argues the real damage lies in the administration's systematic destruction of American economic institutions and global relationships. (09:40)
Professor of Public Policy and Economics at the University of Michigan and regular economic commentator across major television networks. Wolfers is known for his ability to translate complex economic concepts for general audiences and has become increasingly prominent throughout 2025 as a trusted voice on economic policy analysis.
Professor at NYU Stern School of Business, entrepreneur, and host of Prof G Markets. Galloway brings his business school perspective and characteristic direct communication style to economic and business discussions.
Co-host of Prof G Markets and recent Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree in journalism. Elson serves as the economics communicator for the show, helping translate complex economic discussions for broader audiences.
Wolfers makes a crucial distinction between economic "inputs" (quality of personnel, institutional integrity) versus "outputs" (current unemployment, inflation numbers). (08:23) While outputs show mixed but manageable results, the inputs represent "the worst economic team in a White House at a minimum in my lifetime." The firing of the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner represents unprecedented institutional destruction that "you have not seen from a non-autocrat anywhere in the world ever." (12:12) This institutional erosion will manifest as reduced prosperity, fewer entrepreneurial ventures, and unsolved medical breakthroughs decades from now, affecting future generations' economic opportunities.
Despite administration claims about stock market gains, Wolfers reveals that among 23 developed countries, the US ranked third or fourth from the bottom in stock market returns since "Liberation Day." (14:43) Countries like Germany, Italy, Japan, and even Canada (despite trade tensions) outperformed the US market. This data challenges the narrative that market performance validates current economic policies, suggesting instead that American markets are underperforming their global peers during this period.
The speed of AI adoption will determine whether it creates complementary jobs (like bank tellers after ATMs) or eliminates positions entirely (like typing pools after word processors). (27:03) Wolfers explains that slow adoption allows workers to develop new skills and transform their roles, while rapid implementation leads to displacement. Given AI's faster deployment compared to previous technologies - "There's an AI on everyone's desk within two" years versus twenty years for personal computers - the risk of significant labor disruption increases substantially.
Unlike demand-driven inflation where wages eventually catch up, tariff-induced price increases never trigger compensating wage growth. (43:02) When tariffs raise costs, employers don't gain additional revenue to justify higher wages, creating a permanent reduction in purchasing power. Wolfers calculates this represents approximately a 2% permanent reduction in prosperity - equivalent to a $100,000 earner effectively making $98,000 indefinitely. This mechanism makes tariff-driven inflation fundamentally more damaging than traditional inflationary pressures.
The education export industry, worth tens of billions annually with 95% gross margins, is being systematically dismantled through visa restrictions and international reputation damage. (52:03) International students spending $50,000+ annually, scientific conferences generating millions, and H-1B dependent research operations are relocating to countries like Canada. This extends beyond education to tourism, where "no one is coming from Canada or Europe to visit The United States anymore." (53:48) These relationship damages will persist long after current policies change, as "the rest of the world will not forget" America's isolationist turn.