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Hello, hope you had a good Monday.

I’m attending two Thanksgiving dinners this week, which means this weekend I was stocking up (and making stock) for two rounds of slow cooker stuffing. Bad luck, because by some measures stuffing prices are up double digits compared to last year, even as the price of other Thanksgiving staples are down.

Today we’ll do the numbers on how consumers are adapting to higher food prices and airfare ahead of the holiday. But first, let’s look at the relationship between two frequent Thanksgiving dinner conversation topics: Partisan politics and the economy. 😬 — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A stock trader looks at a screen next to a cork board covered in images of Trump.
Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images
How’s the economy doing? Your answer likely depends on how you vote
Political partisanship has become so persistent in consumer sentiment surveys that some economists say it’s getting harder to accurately measure moods of consumers. Marketplace’s Kristin Schwab breaks it down.

Americans feel pretty much the same about the economy this month as they did last month, according to the latest consumer sentiment data — which is to say, bad.

The closely watched survey from the University of Michigan found folks are most sour about inflation, incomes and the stock market. 

But here’s the thing: consumer sentiment surveys have been increasingly skewed by political partisanship. If your party is in the White House, you’re more likely to feel good about the economy. And if your party isn’t, you’re more likely to feel bad.

The split has become so persistent that some economists have begun to question how much consumer sentiment even matters.

There are two kinds of economic numbers. Soft data, like consumer sentiment, and hard data, like consumer spending. The first has historically meant a good predictor of the second.

“Before the pandemic it worked perfectly,” said Hector Sandoval, director of the Economic Analysis Program at the University of Florida.

Then came COVID-19, historic inflation and a presidential election. Though political affiliation had always influenced consumer sentiment, the correlation became more pronounced.

“It’s more noisy now that there is some kind of contamination, if you wanna call it that, on how we measure the mood of consumers,” Sandoval said.

The mood is moody enough for some economists to question the usefulness of the data. One way to better gauge sentiment might be to hone in on how independents feel, because their confidence tends to land somewhere between that of Democrats and Republicans.

“And that is something that hasn’t changed. We’ve seen that now through across three presidential administrations,” said Joanne Hsu, director of the Surveys of Consumers at the University of Michigan.

In other words, the independents do seem truly independent.

READ MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Stocks rallied to kick off a trading week shortened by the holiday. The S&P 500 closed 1.5% higher today, the Dow added 0.4% and the Nasdaq composite surged 2.7%.

  • The price of bitcoin rebounded a bit today, nearing $90,000 by the afternoon. It’s still way below last month’s peak, however.

  • The September jobs report showed about 5.5% of workers have more than one job right now. That number has been ticking up since the pandemic to near 2008 levels now.

  • The Bureau of Economic Analysis canceled its shutdown-delayed initial estimate of third-quarter gross domestic product.

The Trump administration

  • The White House is reportedly working with lawmakers on proposals to extend the Affordable Care Act subsidies that led to the government shutdown and forced ACA marketplace enrollees to make hard choices. 

  • That shutdown cost the U.S. economy about $11 billion, Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent said. The White House is projecting a fourth-quarter economic “hiccup” before big growth in 2026.

  • The Department of Government Efficiency is no more, White House officials told Reuters. Elon Musk started up the agency with a promise to find trillions in savings. It’s not clear he really found any, and DOGE reportedly flailed for a bit before collapsing after Musk left DC.

Your money

  • We’ll get an update on home prices tomorrow, but Zillow data indicates October was a solid month for the housing market thanks to (slightly) lower interest rates.

  • If you show up at the airport without ID, the Transportation Safety Administration is going to start charging you $18 for alternative biometric screening. Here’s a guide to post-shutdown air travel.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I think it's going to be a group of people who earn far above average incomes, even if they're sitting in a standard coach seat."
—  Henry Harteveldt, analyst with Atmosphere Research Group

A record 31 million people are expected to travel by air this holiday, though some are adjusting their schedules to save on expensive Thanksgiving airfare. Others are hitting the road to take advantage of low gas prices.

Kimberly Adams says
Ava Calbreath/Marketplace
Final note
What’s Thanksgiving cost this year?

Might sound obvious but: It really depends on what you’re serving. The consumer price index says groceries are nearly 3% more expensive than last year, but the White House has repeatedly told Americans their feast will be cheaper this year.

The truth is a bit more nuanced; some Thanksgiving staples are up and others are down, while retailers and consumers alike are adjusting to save more money. Marketplace’s Kimberly Adams has everything you need to know in about two minutes, over on our Instagram.
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