it bothers me that the metrics/KPI for "The Economy" in the US are never really straight forward, like they are specifically developed to tell a story of reliability and strength. like how the unemployment rate doesn't count a shitload of actually unemployed humans, or how GDP "growth" is this tortured metric to make disastrous situations seem fundamentally OK.
like it's all predicated on the dogma that saying things are actually bad will make the economic conditions worse as "investors" lose confidence, because the whole system is reliant on the psychology and feelings of maybe 50-100k capitalist pricks with all the deeds, assets, and cash looking to grow their already giant piece of the pie.
so when we actually are officially in a recession according to the latest definitions, it usually means things have been fucked up for multiple years, at least.
if government economists in the US had to actually post clean, straight forward numbers for things like unemployment, vacancies, and aggregated labor/material/debt/rent costs alongside revenues over time, I think it would completely blow the basic support for capitalism among americans to shit.