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Normally Federal Reserve reporter Enda Curran would join the newsletter today to tell us about the state of employment in the US. But today isn’t normal because of the government shutdown. Plus: A new Everybody’s Business podcast, why we’re in a sauce boom, the business school everyone wants and Indian factories’ fears.

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By now, on the first Friday of the month, economists would’ve spent hours rifling through their favorite monthly data release, nonfarm payrolls, to get a sense of how much hiring and firing is underway in the broader economy.

Instead, the US government shutdown has left those same economists twiddling their cursors. Employment data for September that was due for release at 8:30 a.m. Washington time has been delayed until lawmakers vote to reopen the government.

The data void comes at a critical juncture. Recent readings on the labor market have suggested much less hiring than economists had expected. Companies don’t appear to be engaging in mass layoffs, but they’re not rushing out the door to recruit staff either.

The critical question is just how weak conditions have become, in which sectors and why. It’s one of the reasons the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates in September for the first time this year and signaled more cuts may be on the way.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Photographer: Sophie Park/Bloomberg

Although the Fed seems likely to cut again when the board meets this month, the absence of employment data removes a critical piece of the economic jigsaw puzzle the governors need to form their judgment.

“The Fed might not have a full timely picture of the latest economic trends on time for its October meeting,” says Blerina Uruci, chief US economist at T. Rowe Price. “The significance of this cannot be understated.”

To be sure, there are private-sector gauges that capture real-time movement in employment. Policymakers and Wall Street economists watch those too. And those gauges are all pointing to weakness.

The ADP Research data on private-sector employment this week showed payrolls at US companies dropped by 32,000 in September. ADP also revised its August payrolls report to reflect a decline of 3,000, instead of the 54,000 addition first reported. Data from outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas showed employers announced fewer job cuts but also pulled back their hiring plans to the weakest for any September since 2011.

Indicators such as those add to the sense that employment is softening. But for an official read on just how much of a softening is underway, we’ll need to wait until the government reopens.

When will that be? Hard to say. Senate leaders are showing no signs of an immediate off-ramp. Neil Dutta, head of economics at Renaissance Macro Research, wrote of the shutdown in an email this week: “It’s coming at a fragile time, and it could go a while,” he said.

On the Podcast

On this week’s episode of Everybody’s Business, Justin Wolfers, the University of Michigan economist and author, explains how this shutdown may play out differently. Hosts Stacey Vanek Smith and Max Chafkin are also joined by Bloomberg News reporter Zeke Faux to talk about his story on crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun.

Listen and subscribe on Apple, Spotify, iHeart and the Bloomberg Terminal.

In Brief

A Love Affair With Sauce

Photo illustration: Rui Pu for Bloomberg Businessweek; Photos: Shutterstock (6)

When President Barack Obama entered a popular Virginia restaurant in the spring of 2009 and ordered a burger with Dijon mustard—hold the ketchup—American right-wing media went wild. “Plain old ketchup didn’t quite cut it for the president,” Fox News host Sean Hannity said in a segment titled “President Poupon.” Others dubbed the incident “Dijongate.”

In many ways, 2009 was a simpler time—before MAGA, TikTok, the pandemic. It was also a simpler time for condiments, which remained an afterthought in many households beyond the basics. In 2010, Heinz was still so synonymous with ketchup that when an upstart came around offering its own version, it was considered adorably, audaciously naive. “Those little artisanal condiment makers keep trying to unseat Heinz, to no avail,” a New York Times reviewer wrote about Sir Kensington’s ketchup, which came in both spicy and classic. (It never did unseat Heinz, even after big-food maker Unilever Plc bought the brand in 2017.)

Now, after years of innovation among foodmakers and growing culinary curiosity across the US, Heinz no longer holds an iron grip on the condiment market (and Grey Poupon could hardly be considered exotic).

As Deena Shanker writes in her Extra Salt column, the US condiments category was valued at over $12 billion in 2024, a more than 50% increase since 2019: Why America’s Fridges Are Overflowing With Sauce

Harvard Is Most Wanted

Photo illustration: 731; Photo: Getty Images

Harvard Business School has reaffirmed its status as the world’s most coveted MBA program, according to Bloomberg Businessweek’s Best B-Schools survey.

For the third straight year, a plurality of students and alumni—more than 20%—named Harvard, fourth overall in this year’s US ranking, as the program they would choose if costs and admission weren’t obstacles. Stanford Graduate School of Business, the reigning No. 1 school in this year’s US ranking, followed with 15%. No other school cracked more than 5% of the vote.

As Mathieu Benhamou writes, the allure of HBS rests partly on its enduring brand power: Harvard Business School Is Most Coveted Among MBAs Globally

Trump Tariffs Shake Up Textile Industry

Illustration: Raven Jiang for Bloomberg Businessweek

When President Donald Trump first unveiled his “Liberation Day” tariffs in April, R.K. Sivasubramaniam, managing director at Raft Garments, had cause for optimism. His factory in the city of Tiruppur, India’s knitwear capital, makes millions of pairs of underwear that he sells for $1 apiece, with about half the output going to the US. Judging by the poster board Trump displayed in the Rose Garden, Indian exporters faced a tax well below that of rivals in Vietnam and Bangladesh.

After Trump’s election last year, Sivasubramaniam had been confident that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s chummy relationship with the American president would deepen trading ties between India and its biggest customer—so much so that Sivasubramaniam took out a bank loan of about $2 million to buy sewing, printing and elastic-banding machinery.

Sivasubramaniam’s hopes were dashed this summer when the Trump administration slapped an additional tariff on Indian imports as punishment for the country’s purchases of Russian crude oil, doubling the rate to 50%, the highest in all of Asia.

Sivasubramaniam isn’t alone, Nic Querolo and Satviki Sanjay write. Factories that invested in anticipation of a boom in orders are saddled with debt and unsold inventory: Trump’s 50% Tariffs Sow Fear Inside Indian Apparel Hub

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College Sports Escalation 

$10,000
That’s the cost of a special membership at Penn State that includes access to former concession stands where football fans can watch the Nittany Lions take the field. Across the college sports ecosystem, universities are under pressure to find new ways to raise revenue, after a landmark federal settlement opened the door for student athletes to be paid by schools.

Torrential Rain

“The Dubai floods act as a stark warning of the unintended consequences we can unleash when we use such technology to alter the weather.”
Johan Jaques
Meteorologist at environmental data company Kisters
A storm drenched the city in 2024, killing at least four people and raising new questions about the United Arab Emirates’ cloud-seeding program. Read the full story here.

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