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“A Global Macroeconomic and Market Outlook” Ronald Temple, Chief Market Strategist for Lazard’s Financial Advisory and Asset Management businesses, talks inflation, tariffs, and labor supply - and their impact on GDP - together with the latest developments in Europe, China, and Japan, and where the U.S. fits in going forward, before a September 15, 2025 meeting of The Economic Club of Florida.
Show Notes (for complete Show Notes, please visit https://www.economic-club.com/2025-ron-temple)
Mr. Temple took the Club on a world tour of geopolitical issues covering the Eurozone, China, Japan, and the United States. He discussed two areas of concern – inflation and tariffs – and focused on three primary themes:
Mr. Temple pointed out that most U.S. consumer spending is on services – housing, shelter, doctors, financial advisors, lawyers, etc. Only about 24% is on physical goods.
He said that while U.S. job creation is basically at full employment, the year-to-date job creation is the slowest since 2010. This year, there is a significant decline in the number of people who were born in another country, so there are fewer people in the workplace.
“I think for the Federal Reserve there's a real challenge,” he said. “Inflation is still grinding higher as tariffs work their way through to prices. Unemployment has ticked up a little bit, but job growth is much weaker. And if we look at the number of open jobs in the United States per unemployed person, for the first time in years, we're now below 1.0 − meaning there are more unemployed people than open jobs.”
“I think what you're going to see over the next year is the Fed will be cutting rates. But it's not a slam dunk. It's not a clear-cut case that the Fed should be hitting the alarm bells about unemployment, because there's a chance that we will see unemployment at or below four and a half percent by year end, but inflation looking much more worrisome, and it's going to be very hard for economists in the Fed... (for complete Show Notes, please visit https://www.economic-club.com/2025-ron-temple) A TeleDirections podcast
By Economic Club of Florida5
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“A Global Macroeconomic and Market Outlook” Ronald Temple, Chief Market Strategist for Lazard’s Financial Advisory and Asset Management businesses, talks inflation, tariffs, and labor supply - and their impact on GDP - together with the latest developments in Europe, China, and Japan, and where the U.S. fits in going forward, before a September 15, 2025 meeting of The Economic Club of Florida.
Show Notes (for complete Show Notes, please visit https://www.economic-club.com/2025-ron-temple)
Mr. Temple took the Club on a world tour of geopolitical issues covering the Eurozone, China, Japan, and the United States. He discussed two areas of concern – inflation and tariffs – and focused on three primary themes:
Mr. Temple pointed out that most U.S. consumer spending is on services – housing, shelter, doctors, financial advisors, lawyers, etc. Only about 24% is on physical goods.
He said that while U.S. job creation is basically at full employment, the year-to-date job creation is the slowest since 2010. This year, there is a significant decline in the number of people who were born in another country, so there are fewer people in the workplace.
“I think for the Federal Reserve there's a real challenge,” he said. “Inflation is still grinding higher as tariffs work their way through to prices. Unemployment has ticked up a little bit, but job growth is much weaker. And if we look at the number of open jobs in the United States per unemployed person, for the first time in years, we're now below 1.0 − meaning there are more unemployed people than open jobs.”
“I think what you're going to see over the next year is the Fed will be cutting rates. But it's not a slam dunk. It's not a clear-cut case that the Fed should be hitting the alarm bells about unemployment, because there's a chance that we will see unemployment at or below four and a half percent by year end, but inflation looking much more worrisome, and it's going to be very hard for economists in the Fed... (for complete Show Notes, please visit https://www.economic-club.com/2025-ron-temple) A TeleDirections podcast