by Daniel Brouse
July 15, 2025
Today’s CPI report came in hotter than expected, while wage growth fell below expectations. This confirms two major trends that have long been forecast but had yet to materialize simultaneously. Now, they have—and the implications are profound for the economy, markets, and policy.
First, inflation is rising, driven not by wage pressures, but by the Trump administration’s tariffs. Categories such as men’s apparel and women’s dresses showed some of the sharpest price increases, reflecting the pass-through costs of import taxes on clothing, textiles, and raw materials from countries like China, Vietnam, and Mexico. Tariffs, which function as hidden sales taxes on consumers, are now firmly embedded in the CPI, meaning prices are rising even as demand slows.
Second, wages are stagnating—and in many sectors, declining—as artificial intelligence replaces human work hours. Employers are increasingly turning to AI for customer service, content generation, and even skilled analytical tasks, reducing demand for human labor. This deflationary pressure on wages is beginning to show in official data, as lower-income and middle-class workers see slower pay growth while their cost of living increases due to tariff-driven inflation.
This combination—inflation in goods due to protectionist trade policies, coupled with wage deflation from technological displacement—creates a dangerous trap for policymakers and workers alike. The Federal Reserve faces a tightening dilemma: higher prices without the wage growth needed to sustain consumption will slow the economy while keeping inflation elevated, reducing the effectiveness of interest rate cuts.
The bottom line:
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Tariffs are not a solution to inflation; they are a primary driver of it.
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AI is not simply a tool for efficiency; it is now actively suppressing wage growth across broad sectors of the economy.
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The combination of these forces will reduce real purchasing power for most Americans, compress margins for businesses reliant on consumer spending, and further erode economic stability.
If these trends continue, they will reshape the economic landscape, accelerating inequality while undermining demand. Policymakers and investors must prepare for an era of tariff-driven inflation and AI-driven wage stagnation, a combination that threatens the sustainability of U.S. economic growth in the decade ahead.