Q2 Growth Up 3.3%—But Is It Real or a Tariff Mirage?
GDP growth looks fine on paper. Families feel something different—volatile prices, higher borrowing costs, and an uncertain jobs engine.
Hello Friends!
Real GDP was revised up to 3.3% (annualized) in Q2 2025, a bounce from Q1’s contraction, per the BEA second estimate.
Good headline. But when you unpack the components, much of the “strength” comes from a steep drop in imports (which mechanically lifts GDP). That’s accounting, not prosperity.
If we care about families—not just aggregates—we need durable private investment, steady job creation, and lower inflation. That’s not what these data show.
What’s driving the number (and why that matters for households)
Imports plunged as firms unwound pre-tariff stockpiles, which adds to GDP by formula. That’s not a pay raise for parents—it’s a quirk in national accounts. See BEA’s treatment of net exports in the release tables: fewer imports can boost GDP even if family finances don’t improve. BEA
Consumer spending improved modestly, but the composition matters: big-ticket, interest-sensitive purchases remain hostage to higher rates.
Private domestic final sales—the cleanest look at underlying demand—rose 1.9%. Better, but hardly a boom.
Business investment is mixed: intellectual property and equipment were revised up, but overall private investment remains soft relative to a healthy expansion. Families need capital formation for future productivity and real wage growth—not one-off trade arithmetic.
What families actually feel
Prices: The price level is still elevated after the 2021–2023 inflation surge. Even as inflation rates cooled, cumulative price increases compound. Groceries, utilities, and insurance premiums are chewing through paychecks. Track it here: CPI detail.
Rates: Mortgage and auto payments remain high with policy rates elevated; that delays homebuying, refis, and family investments. See Freddie Mac’s Mortgage Market Survey and the Fed funds history.
Jobs & hours: Headline payrolls mask revisions and sectoral churn. What families need is stable full-time work with rising real wages; volatility and tariff-driven cost spikes erode both. Labor market details: BLS.
Childcare & small business costs: When rates and input costs rise, small firms pull back on hiring and hours. That squeezes family schedules and incomes simultaneously.
Bottom line: a 3.3% print does not erase elevated living costs or interest burdens facing parents juggling mortgages, car notes, childcare, and grocery bills.
Policy signals
The Federal Reserve
Mixed signals. The topline growth says “hold”; soft private demand says “be cautious.” The Fed should focus on a rules-based path back to normal—reduce its balance sheet and end mission creep. Families benefit from predictable money, not ad-hoc discretion. FRED
States
Don’t budget off a sugar high. Tie spending growth to population + inflation and use surpluses to buy down broad-based taxes—not launch new programs that lock in future tax hikes. See the framework: ATR’s Sustainable Budget Project and my ongoing work on sustainable budgeting.
Business owners
Plan for volatility. If your inputs are tariff-exposed, hedge and diversify suppliers. Delay “nice-to-have” capex; preserve cash for opportunities. When policy risk is high, optionality is a competitive advantage.
How current federal policies shape these data
Tariffs & trade uncertainty: Front-loading imports in Q1, then an import cliff in Q2, distorted GDP. That cycle doesn’t create family prosperity—it shifts timing and raises costs. Tariffs are taxes paid somewhere in the supply chain, and families absorb them in prices and wages. BEA trade tables
Industrial policy: Subsidy-and-equity schemes try to manufacture growth from Washington. They rarely beat market discovery and too often crowd out private investment while politicizing capital allocation. Families win when markets set prices and entrepreneurs bear risk—not when officials pick favorites. For first principles, see Friedman’s “Free to Choose” and Hayek’s “The Use of Knowledge in Society”.
The free-market playbook for family prosperity
Lower, simpler, flat sales taxes on final goods and services (move to flat/zero over time) to raise after-tax pay and investment. ATR Tax Map
Sustainable budgeting (cap of population + inflation) to keep government from outrunning family incomes. ATR Sustainable Budget Project
Regulatory humility so entrepreneurs can expand jobs, hours, and wages without permission slips.
Sound money: constrain the Fed to predictable rules to stabilize prices until it is shutdown.
Trade openness: stop tariff whiplash; rely on competitive markets that lower prices for parents and boost real wages.
My Take
The GDP revision is fine as a number and flimsy as a narrative. Families don’t live in national accounts—they live in neighborhoods where mortgage quotes, grocery totals, and paychecks either line up or don’t.
Pro-growth reform means getting the rules right: spend within a sustainable limit, tax less and more simply, stop manipulating trade, and restore monetary predictability. Do that, and the next GDP report won’t need an import gimmick to look good—families will feel the growth at the kitchen table.
Listen: New episodes of the Let People Prosper Show dig into these data with the people shaping policy.
Final Thought: States and firms should prepare for noise in the aggregates and stay disciplined. Families need stability—not theatrics. Let’s get convergent out of the way to let people prosperity!


Here is a bit of a different take:
https://committeetounleashprosperity.com/hotlines/so-much-for-trump-causing-a-second-great-depression/
One fact missing. Existing trade agreements have often barred tariffs to begin with. For example, much of the trade between US with Canada and Mexico remains untouched. In other areas, local US production has actually increased. Fuel prices have come down in many areas but this will take time to filter through the economy.