{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/696176c73a409cca490056fd/69bb5d8f9f7cc5ed03bec91b?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Zero Employment Growth Equilibrium: What it is, Why it Matters, and Why the Fed Can't Fix It","description":"<p>Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell held interest rates steady at 3.5%-3.75% at the March 2026 FOMC meeting — but the real story isn't the rate decision. In this episode of The Tradeoff, Mattie Duppler grades the Fed press conference against the six-item cheat sheet she gave listeners in the last episode: how restrictive was the language, what happened to the dot plot, did Powell find a replacement for \"transitory,\" and did he slam the door on rate cuts this year.</p><p>The headline dominating coverage is Powell's declaration that he won't leave the Fed board until the DOJ inquiry is over — his most direct statement yet on the Trump administration's probe into the central bank. But buried in the Q&amp;A, Powell used a phrase that deserves far more attention: \"zero employment growth equilibrium.\" The Fed chair described an economy where net job creation is effectively zero, the labor force has stopped growing due to lower immigration and declining birth rates, and the only source of GDP growth is productivity gains that started in 2021 — before AI.</p><p>Mattie connects the dots the Fed won't: those productivity gains trace back to women entering the workforce during the pandemic. If the labor force is flat and AI alone can't close the gap, female labor participation isn't a social issue — it's the most underutilized economic asset in America.</p><p>This episode covers: March 2026 Fed rate decision, FOMC dot plot, Powell press conference, interest rate outlook, oil shock inflation, tariff impact on prices, labor force participation, productivity growth, Trump vs. Powell, DOJ Federal Reserve investigation, and what it all means for policy, markets, and your mortgage.</p>","author_name":"Mattie Duppler"}