Boom or Bust? Reconciling Strong GDP Growth With Sluggish Job Gains

The U.S. economy grew at a surprisingly strong annualized rate of 3.0% in the second quarter of 2025, which far outpaced the post-2000 average of 2.3% and easily beat expectations. At first glance, this might suggest a booming economy. Yet, jobs creation tells a vastly different story where employment growth has stalled by falling well below the average since January 2000 of 284,000 jobs per month. How can we reconcile this stark divergence between headline GDP and the labor market?

exhibit 1

To start, it’s important to understand what makes up GDP and employment data. While related over the long term, they can diverge in shorter periods due to the way they are measured and the forces that drive them. The second quarter GDP surge, for example, was not driven by domestic economic strength, but rather a sharp decline in imports. With imports plunging 30.3%, largely due to changing tariff policies, net exports added nearly 5% to GDP.

This second quarter decline in imports was largely set up by the first quarter’s jump in imports as businesses built inventory ahead of the expected tariffs.