Jobs are harder to get and fewer are planning to buy homes or cars, says The Conference Board CEO
December 23, 2025 • 4m 12s
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
00:00.350
let's
bring
in
the
conference
board
CEO
steve
alden
all
right
steve
adland
jump
in
the
mix
here
important
to
this
whole
nice
story
we're
trying
to
tell
her
that
the
president
wants
to
hear
about
strong
economy
without
inflation
would
be
a
labor
market
that
is
i
guess
strong
but
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
00:16.350
not
inflationary
what
what
do
you
see
going
on
here
'cause
right
now
consumers
are
worried
about
the
opposite
they're
worried
about
job
loss
AI
everything
like
that
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
00:24.930
well
so
the
conference
board
's
consumer
confidence
index
declined
for
the
fifth
month
in
a
row
that's
bad
news
however
there
was
some
good
news
in
it
remember
there
are
two
components
to
the
consumer
confidence
index
one
is
the
present
situations
so
how
how
the
consumers
are
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
00:41.330
feeling
about
their
situation
right
now
the
other
is
the
expectations
index
so
what's
going
to
happen
in
the
next
six
months
all
year
long
the
present
situation
has
been
pretty
good
pretty
strong
people
are
saying
yeah
i
feel
OK
now
but
my
expectation
is
that
it's
going
to
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
00:58.550
decline
for
the
first
time
all
year
it
flipped
so
the
expectation
index
seems
to
have
bottomed
out
and
they're
now
starting
to
say
i'm
hurting
this
is
starting
to
feel
bad
right
now
now
on
top
of
that
you
have
to
bifurcate
it
because
the
income
level
is
you
know
drives
their
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
01:19.870
expectation
and
if
you
look
at
below
hundred
and
twenty
five
thousand
dollars
annual
income
their
consumer
confidence
went
down
but
above
that
their
consumer
confidence
actually
went
up
and
i
think
this
is
what
the
administration
is
looking
at
there
are
two
economies
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
01:35.630
you
see
the
K
another
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
01:36.830
one
is
feeling
great
and
one
is
not
feeling
so
great
so
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
01:40.270
steve
we
have
now
coming
down
the
pike
we'll
talk
more
about
this
later
on
bigger
tax
refunds
we
also
have
possibly
the
obamacare
health
premiums
going
up
not
exactly
the
same
crowd
but
some
overlap
there
do
you
think
the
consumer
is
going
to
get
a
tailwind
early
next
year
or
is
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
01:54.670
it
going
to
be
the
opposite
where
all
these
factors
come
home
to
roost
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
01:58.850
the
big
spending
is
on
the
high
end
you
know
the
the
wealthy
consumer
is
driving
it
right
now
and
that's
the
important
thing
it
you
know
what
it
depends
on
commodities
right
now
gas
is
coming
down
that's
helping
food
is
still
rising
and
so
when
you
talk
to
these
consumers
they
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
02:12.650
say
look
we
thought
inflation
was
going
to
come
down
what
they're
really
saying
is
we
thought
prices
were
going
to
come
down
and
they're
not
seeing
food
prices
come
down
in
everyday
prices
now
flipping
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
02:23.090
over
to
what
steve
can
i
just
steve
i
want
to
just
hit
you
up
for
one
second
which
is
does
all
this
emphasize
also
the
regressive
nature
of
tariffs
as
attacks
that
this
is
certainly
burdening
lower
income
americans
much
are
they
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
02:35.870
are
they
showing
up
in
tariffs
are
a
regressive
tax
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
02:38.110
but
do
we
have
them
in
in
the
prices
tariffs
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
02:41.230
in
the
prices
tariffs
are
certainly
in
the
prices
you
have
a
one
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
02:45.190
point
you
also
have
this
you
also
have
this
small
business
thing
steve
which
is
you
know
individual
consumers
are
also
small
businesses
millions
of
small
businesses
sole
proprietorships
one
or
two
employees
they
act
as
consumers
they
put
their
all
other
credits
on
our
credit
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
02:59.470
their
personal
credit
card
those
folks
are
really
hurting
big
businesses
doing
fine
small
businesses
hurting
so
it's
main
street
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
03:06.390
i
have
an
idea
kelly
that
we
can
talk
about
some
other
time
i
don't
know
how
to
do
it
but
there
should
be
a
small
business
rebate
on
tariffs
but
i
don't
know
how
they
do
that
it
reminds
you
of
PPP
PPP
or
some
way
kind
of
i
don't
know
see
but
i
think
steve
is
on
to
that
that
that
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
03:20.550
is
it's
not
the
sole
piece
but
i
believe
it
to
be
a
piece
of
like
you
can
say
all
right
it's
kind
of
washed
out
we're
able
to
grow
do
all
kinds
of
stuff
with
tariffs
OK
but
it
a
certain
sector
of
the
this
is
Kelly Evans (Anchor)
03:29.710
where
the
barry
naps
of
the
world
would
say
that's
why
you
gotta
get
the
rate
down
you
know
steve
can
Steve Liesman (Senior Economics Reporter)
03:34.230
you
fly
can
you
can
you
talk
about
good
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
03:37.390
yeah
can
can
i
say
one
more
thing
steve
on
this
overheating
thing
it
in
a
normal
economy
that
past
historical
economy
where
it's
manufacturing
driven
economy
we
would
be
overheated
right
now
and
the
inflation
thing
would
be
more
important
this
is
a
services
driven
number
you
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
03:53.230
said
it
yourself
that's
the
surprise
it's
the
upside
is
in
particularly
in
july
in
in
august
services
and
yet
the
labor
market
is
weakening
at
the
same
time
which
means
there
is
productivity
in
the
service
sector
which
is
driving
the
numbers
so
this
is
a
different
kind
of
Steve Odland (President & CEO)
04:09.950
economy
than
we've
seen
in
the
past
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