
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


#622: #622: The headlines said America added 147,000 jobs in June. The reality? Private companies actually cut 33,000 positions.
Grad students just lost access to unlimited borrowing. Parent PLUS loans now cap at $65,000. And tariffs are about to jump as high as 70 percent.
Everything is changing at once — taxes, tariffs, student loans, and immigration policy. And data from the University of Michigan says that consumers feel more pessimistic than they did six months ago.
Welcome to the 4th of July First Friday episode. On America's 249th birthday, we unpack these economic stories.
Timestamps:
Note: Timestamps will vary on individual listening devices based on dynamic advertising run times. The provided timestamps are approximate and may be several minutes off due to changing ad lengths.
(0:00) Introduction
(1:19) Historical trivia about the Declaration of Independence
(2:28) Three presidents died on July 4th — statistical improbability explained
(4:24) Trump signs domestic policy bill extending 2017 tax cuts
(6:13) Student loan changes — borrowing caps and repayment plan eliminations
(8:53) Tariff pause expires July 9th, new rates announced
(12:00) Original tariff rates and Lesotho example breakdown
(16:26) June jobs report headlines versus private sector reality
(22:54) ADP reports private job losses while government hiring grows
(26:46) Consumer confidence drops 18 percent since December
(30:59) Inflation expectations versus actual 2.4 percent rate
(34:19) Fed takes wait-and-see approach amid policy uncertainty
(36:58) Labor market stagnation mirrors Federal Reserve strategy
For more information, visit the show notes at https://affordanything.com/episode622
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Paula Pant | Cumulus Podcast Network4.7
34653,465 ratings
#622: #622: The headlines said America added 147,000 jobs in June. The reality? Private companies actually cut 33,000 positions.
Grad students just lost access to unlimited borrowing. Parent PLUS loans now cap at $65,000. And tariffs are about to jump as high as 70 percent.
Everything is changing at once — taxes, tariffs, student loans, and immigration policy. And data from the University of Michigan says that consumers feel more pessimistic than they did six months ago.
Welcome to the 4th of July First Friday episode. On America's 249th birthday, we unpack these economic stories.
Timestamps:
Note: Timestamps will vary on individual listening devices based on dynamic advertising run times. The provided timestamps are approximate and may be several minutes off due to changing ad lengths.
(0:00) Introduction
(1:19) Historical trivia about the Declaration of Independence
(2:28) Three presidents died on July 4th — statistical improbability explained
(4:24) Trump signs domestic policy bill extending 2017 tax cuts
(6:13) Student loan changes — borrowing caps and repayment plan eliminations
(8:53) Tariff pause expires July 9th, new rates announced
(12:00) Original tariff rates and Lesotho example breakdown
(16:26) June jobs report headlines versus private sector reality
(22:54) ADP reports private job losses while government hiring grows
(26:46) Consumer confidence drops 18 percent since December
(30:59) Inflation expectations versus actual 2.4 percent rate
(34:19) Fed takes wait-and-see approach amid policy uncertainty
(36:58) Labor market stagnation mirrors Federal Reserve strategy
For more information, visit the show notes at https://affordanything.com/episode622
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

23,195 Listeners

1,269 Listeners

3,212 Listeners

1,977 Listeners

1,654 Listeners

1,951 Listeners

1,168 Listeners

806 Listeners

988 Listeners

1,782 Listeners

5,147 Listeners

10,181 Listeners

2,974 Listeners

892 Listeners

3,082 Listeners

6,478 Listeners

729 Listeners

452 Listeners

45,784 Listeners

278 Listeners

158 Listeners

1,607 Listeners

201 Listeners

3,440 Listeners

2,232 Listeners

2,938 Listeners

83 Listeners

355 Listeners

19 Listeners

53 Listeners

777 Listeners

3 Listeners

2 Listeners

8 Listeners