American 'Economic Exceptionalism' Isn't Dead: How the US Is 'Built Different'

SUMMARY

  • US economy remains structurally more productive than peers.
  • This 'American Economic Exceptionalism' is powered by innovation and labor flexibility.
  • The US' commitment to Research &Development bolsters its innovation edge…and AI should help perpetuate this edge.
"Productivity isn't everything…but in the long run, it is almost everything.”
--Paul Krugman, economist

Much has been made about the recent improvement of international stock markets relative to the US. After tremendous US outperformance over the last decade, S&P 500 returns have lagged international thus far in 2025. Many investors have asked us whether we believe this is the beginning of the end of what we’ve coined as ‘American Economic Exceptionalism' - our view that the US economy is structurally more robust and resilient than its developed world peers. Our response is an emphatic ‘no’…we think the US economy is ‘built different’ (to paraphrase a Gen Z meme) in a way that will continue to advantage US companies.

We continue to see evidence of American Economic Exceptionalism (aka ‘AEE’), which we believe manifests itself over time in stronger corporate earnings patterns…and thus stronger stock performance. Importantly, we believe this phenomenon is structural – it has been in place for decades – and it operates largely outside the vagaries of US politics. AEE is getting harder to refute quantitatively, with the US’ remarkable economic rebound coming out of COVID-19 (see Chart 1, below).

CHART 1: US ECONOMY BEATING PEERS PRE-AND POST-COVID*

US Economy beating peers pre- and post-COVID

*Note on Chart 1: We chose not to display China - the world’s 2nd largest economy - on this GDP chart. While official Chinese National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) data suggests the mainland economy has grown roughly 5% a year since 2019 - which would imply an economy approximately 30% larger than pre-pandemic - there is widespread skepticism (which we share) about the credibility of that data. It is widely believed that the national GDP is heavily ‘massaged’ by the Chinese Communist Party for political aims – see our Weekly View from 8/29/23 for more on this topic.

America's ‘Special Sauce’: A More Productive Economy

In our view, AEE is driven in large part by higher economic and corporate productivity in the US versus regional peers in Europe and Asia. (see Chart 2). We believe America’s ‘special sauce’ is not one particular aspect, but rather the confluence of a variety of factors, including the following:

CHART 2: US INNOVATION, LABOR FLEXIBILITY, & DEMOGRAPHIC ADVANTAGES IN PLACE FOR DECADES

Real GDP per workers, quarterly data