- Many latest financial indicators mirror a U.S. economic system that is cooling down.
- A brand new ballot discovered Utahns gloomy over the nationwide economic system and private funds.
- The Utah economic system continues to outpace remainder of the nation.
Cami Hauver and her husband, Oliver, are in good stead in the case of their family funds, and it’s a state of affairs they’ve cultivated by way of considerate resolution making.
The couple, each of their 30s, attended in-state faculties and bought by way of their undergraduate research with out accruing debt, drive used automobiles that they paid money for and acquired a house in Sandy in 2021 when mortgage rates of interest have been nonetheless hovering within the 3% vary.
“I might say we’re doing high-quality,” Cami Hauver stated. “And we really feel very fortunate in comparison with different individuals in our age group.”
However what’s happening on the earth generally, and the U.S. financial panorama extra near house, is a trigger for concern.
“I do really feel a way of anxiousness for the longer term,” Cami Hauver stated. “One factor that we’re working towards is having children some day. Bringing children into this world, with so many issues altering, it’s arduous to not really feel some stress about it.”
And the Hauvers aren’t alone of their uneasy emotions.
What’s happening with the U.S. economic system?
Even forward of the final two weeks of dismal financial studies reflecting a U.S. economic system that’s shedding steam, a brand new Deseret Information/Hinckley Institute of Politics ballot discovered a majority of Utahns reporting a lack of religion within the course of the nationwide economic system.
And although President Donald Trump has continued to tout his tariff insurance policies and the financial agenda embodied within the just lately handed federal tax-and-spending invoice as methods that can bolster the nation’s monetary wherewithal, even some in his interior circle have acknowledged there could also be trigger for fear.
Following the discharge of a dismal month-to-month jobs report final week that enraged Trump, and led to the firing of the pinnacle of the federal company that collects that knowledge, White Home economist Kevin Hassett grounded his buoyancy in regards to the U.S. economic system with a dose of concern.
“There are lots of actually good causes to be tremendous optimistic in regards to the second half of the 12 months,” Hassett, director of the Nationwide Financial Council, instructed CNBC. “However completely that jobs quantity, if the revision seems to be true, does counsel that there’s much less momentum than we thought.”
However the Labor Division’s June employment report, which underperformed expectations and included a downward revision to Could and June numbers that shaved 258,000 jobs off these mixed tallies, hasn’t been the one cloud showing over the home economic system of late.
The newest federal inflation knowledge, June’s Client Value Index report, discovered costs on U.S. items and companies rose at a 2.7% annual charge that month, ratcheting up from Could’s 2.4% and a rise that will mirror the primary indicators of commerce tariffs impacting U.S. shopper outlays. Costs rose 0.3% on a month-to-month foundation in June as general inflation, which had been largely shifting down since a January studying of three%, hit its highest degree since February.
Beside the prices of primary requirements like groceries and housing persevering with to rise, tariff-sensitive items together with home equipment, toys, electronics, attire and sporting items additionally noticed will increase.
“You might be beginning to see scattered bits of the tariff inflation regime filter in,” Eric Winograd, chief economist at asset administration agency AllianceBernstein, instructed the Associated Press following the report’s launch. Winograd added that costs on long-lasting items additionally rose in June, in contrast with a 12 months in the past, for the primary time in about three years.
In a report revealed Thursday by funding analysis agency Morningstar, JPMorgan portfolio supervisor Priya Misra stated the complete weight of tariffs has but to hit the U.S. economic system and that the eventual impact on inflation might trigger Client Value Index will increase to hit 3% to three.5% by December.
Development within the U.S. gross home product, a measure of the whole worth of products and companies produced within the nation, slowed considerably within the first half of the 12 months in comparison with the final two years, in keeping with a report launched final week.
Client spending, a major driver of the U.S. economic system, has additionally been on a cooling pattern and a brand new raft of tariffs went into impact this week, impacting commerce charges with over 60 nations and the 27-member bloc of European Union nations. Most economists predict the tariffs will result in greater shopper costs on some items, although the extent and timing of these will increase stays unclear.
What Utahns say in regards to the world of cash
What’s extra clear, nonetheless, is how Utahns are feeling in regards to the course of the native and nationwide economies in addition to the present state of their private funds.
In statewide on-line polling carried out July 9-16 by HarrisX for the Deseret Information in partnership with the College of Utah’s Hinckley Institute of Politics, virtually half of Utah voters who participated within the survey, 49%, stated the U.S. economic system was on the incorrect observe versus 40% who imagine the nation’s economic system is headed in the proper course.

When parsed by self-identified social gathering affiliations, 57% of Republican respondents versus 13% of Democrats stated the U.S. economic system was heading in the right direction whereas 31% of GOP contributors instructed pollsters the nation’s economic system was on the incorrect observe as did 80% of Democrats.
Ballot contributors have been pointedly extra optimistic about the place Utah’s economic system is headed with 51% reporting they imagine the state is on the proper fiscal path whereas 32% stated Utah is on the incorrect financial observe.
Once more, deep divides turned obvious when sifting responses by political persuasion with 67% of Republicans and 31% of Democrats saying Utah is on the proper financial observe, and 20% of Republicans in comparison with 50% of Democrats saying the state is off on the incorrect observe.

When requested, “Would you say your private monetary state of affairs is enhancing, getting worse or staying the identical?”, 26% report their funds are enhancing, 34% stated getting worse and 38% indicated their funds are holding regular.
As for private funds, 33% of Republicans say they’re getting higher in comparison with 20% of Democrats; 24% of Republicans say they’re getting worse in comparison with 34% of Democrats, and 42% of Republicans say they’re staying the identical in comparison with 37% of Democrats.
Apparently, Utahns’ emotions in regards to the U.S. and Utah economies in addition to their private funds have been unwavering since earlier this 12 months. Responses to those self same questions within the new Deseret Information/Hinckley ballot have been virtually similar to what pollsters discovered back in February.
An economist breaks it down
In a Deseret Information interview, Phil Dean, public finance senior fellow on the College of Utah’s Kem C. Gardner Coverage Institute, stated he wasn’t shocked by Utahns’ cut up opinions in regards to the nationwide and state economies, noting the viewpoints largely mirror Utah’s greater degree of efficiency in contrast many of the remainder of the nation.
Utah is definitely outperforming the typical readings for the remainder of the nation on inflation, job development and state gross home product or GDP. Whereas the U.S. clocked stable 2.8% GDP development in 2024, Utah blew previous the nationwide charge, and each different state within the nation, with a 4.5% year-over-year GDP soar final 12 months whereas breaking the $300 billion mark in financial exercise for the primary time final 12 months, totaling $301 billion.
Utah can be holding down the No. 1 spot in cumulative GDP development over the previous 10 years at 64%.
However whereas the Beehive State’s economic system is doing nicely, Dean famous Utah continues to be very related to and reliant upon what’s happening in the remainder of the nation, and that’s a set of circumstances that’s a little bit extra iffy.
“So far as the general economic system, we’re positively seeing moderation happen,” Dean stated. “I feel there are nonetheless questions in a lot of areas as to the depth and extent of that moderation.”
Dean stated that whereas U.S. inflation has just lately been on the rise, the present charge continues to be within the “excessive finish of regular” vary. He additionally pointed to combined indicators, with inflation on companies trending down whereas broader worth will increase have been centered on items. And that’s the place tariff pressures might grow to be extra notable within the close to time period.
“Tariffs will exert inflationary strain over time,” Dean stated. “However there may be lots of uncertainty about how that performs out.”