The doomer case against the Trump economy isn’t imaginary. It’s built on real price pain, real anger and real political ammunition.
After the April inflation report showed consumer prices up 3.8 percent over the previous year, the Democratic National Committee lashed out at Republican President Donald Trump’s “failed economic agenda.”
The public mood looks just as grim: the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index fell to 44.8 in May, the lowest reading in the survey’s history, below the previous record set in June 2022.
DNC spokesperson Jaelin O’Halloran took the doomerism even further, saying Trump “has wrecked the economy and made life nearly impossible for working families”.
Yet the strongest broad economic numbers point in a different direction.
The Trump economy is expensive, uneven and politically vulnerable. It is also much stronger than the doomer story allows.
1. Real GDP Per Person: $70,502
The broadest case against the collapse narrative starts with real GDP per capita, which reached $70,502 in the first quarter of 2026, according to Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) data.
That figure is adjusted for inflation and population, which means it measures real output per person rather than a bigger economy inflated by higher prices or more people.
The same series put real GDP per capita at $68,979 in the first quarter of 2025, so the latest reading shows a year-over-year gain in the material output available per American.
GDP per person does not pay the rent, and it does not reveal whether gains are fairly shared.
Still, it is hard to describe an economy as broadly broken when the country is producing more inflation-adjusted output per person than at any point before.
2. Real Consumption Per Person: $48,816
The “tapped-out consumer” story has one big problem: Americans are still consuming at record real levels.
Real personal consumption expenditures per capita reached $48,816 in the first quarter of 2026, federal data shows, up from $47,881 a year earlier.
That number strips out inflation and population growth, so it is not merely a reflection of higher prices at the checkout line.
This does not mean households feel comfortable. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported that gasoline prices were up 28.4 percent over the year ending in April, and consumers notice gas stations more often than national accounts tables.
But the aggregate behavior still matters. A country with rising real consumption per person is not behaving like a country in economic free fall.
3. Real After-Tax Income Per Person: $52,330
The most useful answer to price-level despair is income-level context.
Real disposable personal income per capita stood at $52,330 in April 2026, per the federal data, down from $52,934 in January but still above nearly every monthly reading in 2024.
Disposable personal income measures income after personal current taxes, and the “real” version adjusts for inflation.
This is where the politics of inflation becomes brutal.
People remember that eggs, rent, insurance and gas cost more than they used to cost. They tend to discount the less visible fact that broad after-tax purchasing power has also risen.
The bad-economy story works emotionally because prices are salient. It weakens analytically because incomes have not stood still.
4. Unemployment: 4.3 Percent
A bad economy usually shows up first in jobs, and the labor market is not yet sending that signal.
The unemployment rate was 4.3 percent in April 2026, the prime-age employment-population ratio was 80.7 percent, and total nonfarm payroll employment reached 158.736 million, the BLS data says.
Those are not recession-style labor numbers of a “wrecked” economy.
The momentum, though, has clearly cooled. Payrolls rose just 115,000 in April after roughly a year of little net change, and employment fell outright in February. The level of employment is healthy; the trend is weakening.
The caveat is that work can be plentiful while budgets still feel tight.
The University of Michigan reported in May that lower-income consumers and those without college degrees posted especially sharp sentiment declines, partly because they are more sensitive to gas and essentials.
That caveat should sharpen the analysis, not overturn it. The Trump economy may be punishing voters at the pump, but it is still keeping a historically large share of prime-age Americans employed.
5. Household Debt Service: 11.32 Percent
The debt-panic version of the doomer case also needs scale.
Household and nonprofit net worth reached $184.1 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2025, Federal Reserve data shows, while household debt-service payments were 11.32 percent of disposable personal income.
That debt-service figure is higher than the post-pandemic lows, but it remains far below the 15 percent-plus burden seen before the 2008 financial crisis.
Raw debt totals can sound alarming because the country is bigger, richer and more asset-heavy than it used to be.
The better test is whether required payments are devouring income. In aggregate, they are not.
The Scar Tissue of Inflation
The anti-doomer case has to stay honest.
The April CPI report showed inflation at 3.8 percent, energy up 17.9 percent, food up 3.2 percent and gasoline up 28.4 percent, with the energy spike tracing largely to the Iran war and the disruption of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
The University of Michigan survey found that 57 percent of consumers spontaneously mentioned high prices eroding their personal finances, and year-ahead inflation expectations rose to 4.8 percent in May.
The pain is real, and the political liability for Trump is real, especially with the midterm elections looming in November.
Cost of living is the issue at the fore of Americans’ minds right now, as it was back in 2024 when they rejected Kamala Harris after the era of “Bidenflation.” Trump’s economic approval numbers augur bad news for the GOP this time around.
There is also a timing problem, and it cuts against the comfortable reading. The strongest figures here—real output and real consumption per person—are first-quarter readings that largely predate that shock.
The gloom shows up in the data that runs later: the record-low sentiment of May, a job market that has nearly stopped adding workers, and real after-tax income that has slipped since January.
Some of the public’s pessimism is therefore not nostalgia for old prices but a forward-looking read on an energy shock still working its way through the economy.
The level of American well-being remains high. The direction of travel is the harder question.
But the larger picture is still more complicated than the doomer framing.
Real output per person is at a high, real consumption per person is at a high, after-tax real income is near the top of the series, unemployment is low, and debt service is manageable by historical standards.
It is an economy many Americans are judging through the scar tissue of inflation—and, increasingly, through anxiety about where the next numbers may be headed.
