Disinflation Through 2026 β€” Why Labor Data, AI Spending, and Policy May Be Misread

Disinflation Through 2026 β€” Why Labor Data, AI Spending, and Policy May Be Misread

πŸ“– About This Summary

This article is a summary of the interview β€œTed Oakley – Oxbow Advisors – Interview Series – Dr. Lacy Hunt – February 26, 2026” by Oxbow Advisors. The discussion examines why disinflationary forces may persist into 2026, why labor market data may be overstated, how monetary policy may be failing the real economy, and why AI-driven investment could create excess capacity rather than durable demand. All content is edited and annotated by Time Health Capital.

Innovation can transform an economy β€” but the transition often overshoots before it stabilizes.

πŸ“‰ Fragile Labor Markets & Overstated Job Growth

Dr. Hunt argues that recent labor data has overstated employment strength and may be masking a weaker consumer foundation.

  • Payrolls may have been overcounted in recent years
  • Net job creation in 2025 may have averaged near 10,000 per month
  • Job gains were concentrated in social services and healthcare

Meanwhile, household fundamentals appear weaker:

  • Real disposable income (after taxes and inflation) has declined
  • Compensation growth has slowed faster than inflation
  • Savings rates have fallen near historically low levels

The implication is disinflationary: households spend despite weakening real purchasing power β€” but that behavior is not sustainable.

πŸ’° Disinflation vs. Real Income Pressure

Even as headline inflation has slowed, the discussion emphasizes that wage growth may be slowing faster β€” leaving real purchasing power weaker.

  • Households draw down savings to maintain consumption
  • Real income pressure reduces demand over time
  • Demand weakness becomes a natural disinflationary force

In this framework, inflation can cool not because conditions are improving β€” but because demand is quietly deteriorating.

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πŸ“Š GDP vs. Gross Domestic Income Disconnect

Dr. Hunt highlights a divergence between GDP (spending) and GDI (income). In theory, spending equals income β€” the circular flow of economics. But the discussion argues the data has separated:

  • GDP growth appears stronger than income growth
  • Income data may be distorted by flawed labor estimates
  • If income is overstated, then savings and demand may also be overstated

The claim is that this disconnect cannot persist indefinitely β€” eventually, spending adjusts to reflect weaker underlying income.

🧠 AI Boom: Innovation or Overinvestment?

The interview draws parallels between major innovation cycles β€” steamships (1830s), railroads (1870s), and dot-coms (late 1990s). Each proved transformational, but also triggered overinvestment and financial stress.

Concerns raised about AI include:

  • Massive capital expenditures
  • Heavy debt accumulation
  • Unclear near-term revenue streams
  • Potential labor displacement

AI may enhance productivity β€” but if it reduces labor income without replacing demand, it weakens the circular flow: less income β†’ less demand β†’ excess capacity β†’ disinflationary pressure.

Innovation changes the economy β€” but it doesn’t guarantee smooth outcomes.

🏦 Monetary Policy: Restrictive for Households, Easy for Finance

Despite rate cuts totaling 175 basis points, the discussion argues the real economy has not meaningfully benefited. Lending growth flowed more toward financial channels than household demand.

  • Bank lending growth flowed primarily to private credit and private equity
  • Consumer and small business lending did not meaningfully accelerate
  • Delinquencies and bankruptcies have risen

The claim is that easing may be supporting financial engineering rather than productive investment β€” which contributes to slower long-term growth.

πŸ“‰ Tariffs: Inflationary First, Disinflationary Later

The interview frames tariffs as a two-stage effect:

  • Initially inflationary due to supply shifting inward
  • Later disinflationary as higher prices reduce demand
  • Profit margins compress and secondary demand effects dominate

The view expressed is that tariff effects may contribute to lower inflation later in 2026–2027 as demand adjusts downward.

πŸ› Federal Deficits & Potential Regime Change at the Fed

Federal spending growth is described as slowing compared to prior years, though deficits remain large (around ~6% of GDP). Dr. Hunt suggests a potential regime change at the Federal Reserve, including:

  • Greater monetary discipline
  • Less willingness to monetize debt
  • Reduced reliance on forward guidance and QE

The argument is that inflation is ultimately a monetary phenomenon β€” and policy choices drive long-term price stability.

πŸ“‰ Long-Term Rates & Treasury Outlook

Disinflationary pressures identified include:

  • Weak real income growth
  • Slowing labor markets
  • Tariff-driven demand effects
  • Productivity-driven cost moderation

The expectation presented is that:

  • Long-term Treasury yields may gradually decline
  • Inflation psychology takes time to unwind
  • Bond markets may eventually recognize systemic cracks

The process may be slow β€” but the direction described is disinflationary.

πŸ’‘ Our Commentary / What It Means for Us

Three structural themes stand out:

  • Real income weakness is a powerful disinflationary force.
  • Monetary easing has not meaningfully supported Main Street.
  • Innovation cycles historically overshoot before stabilizing.

If income growth remains subdued and fiscal stimulus slows, long-duration assets may benefit from declining inflation expectations.

The key question is whether policymakers allow the disinflationary process to unfold β€” or attempt renewed intervention.

❓ Questions & Implications for Readers

  • Is job growth overstated relative to reality?
  • Are households weaker than headline data suggests?
  • Will AI produce sustainable revenue β€” or excess capacity?
  • Can monetary discipline return without destabilizing markets?
  • Are long-term bonds positioned for structural disinflation?

πŸŽ₯ Prefer to Watch the Full Discussion?

Ted Oakley – Oxbow Advisors – Interview Series – Dr. Lacy Hunt – February 26, 2026

πŸ’‘ Ready to explore alternative asset strategies? Talk directly with Dr. Ozoude at Time Health Capital.

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Disclaimer: This summary is based on the video β€œTed Oakley – Oxbow Advisors – Interview Series – Dr. Lacy Hunt – February 26, 2026” by Oxbow Advisors. All rights to the original content belong to the creator. Time Health Capital provides this article for educational and informational purposes only β€” not as investment advice.

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