2025: A Year of Promise and Paybacks

The College Football playoffs included 12 teams this year and all five automatic berth teams (because they won their conference championships) are now out, including the top two ranked teams, Oregon and Georgia. It wasn’t supposed to turn out this way, and the debate about why has only just started.

And if you think forecasting college football is hard, try the economy, stock market, and elections. Not one Wall Street firm came close to predicting the level of the S&P 500 on 12/31/24. They were all too low. The sharp slowdown in growth, or even recession, that we forecast did not come true.

Inflation stopped improving too, and even the Fed had to shift its forecast for rate cuts for 2025, reducing them from a total of one percentage point to half of that. And don’t forget that most presidential election forecasts missed the shift in nearly all demographic groups even in blue states toward Donald Trump.

All of this makes forecasting 2025 another significant challenge. The US has run nearly $2 trillion budget deficits in each of the past two years, half of all job growth in the past two years has been in government and healthcare jobs, growth in the money supply is trending higher.

At the same time, the new Trump Administration wants to cut spending by up to $2 trillion (over how many years we have no idea), push for an extension of the 2017 tax cuts, and possibly cut other tax rates as well. In addition, tariffs are in the picture, as is a significant slowdown in immigration, with deportations of some immigrants who are already here.