Posted on Tuesday, September 9, 2025
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by Outside Contributor
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You might’ve missed the encouraging economic news over the past week, amid leftist jeremiads over the Trump Administration sweeping the nation’s capital of crime, or Minnesota Governor and former Vice Presidential candidate Tim Walz openly joking about Donald Trump dying, but the American economy accelerated at an even faster pace than originally estimated in the second quarter of this year.
Although economic forecasting can be a treacherous endeavor, the promise of even greater future acceleration appears strong as the Trump Administration’s tax cuts begin kicking in as this year progresses.
The Commerce Department’s upgraded estimate that the United States economy expanded at a robust 3.3% rate in the second quarter of 2025 – up from its original estimate of 3% – doesn’t merely represent a technical upgrade. It suggests a potential “Trump Bump” reaffirming the value of deregulation, lower taxes, and free-market reorientation.
To appreciate the significance of that 3.3% growth, consider the broader historical backdrop. That figure surpasses the post-World War II U.S. average annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate of approximately 3.2% – historically considered the benchmark for solid, sustainable growth.
For the U.S. economy to outpace that mark in the first full quarter of the Trump Administration signals that we’re getting something right even amid peripheral headwinds.
Notably, that growth also contrasts sharply with the economic record of Barack Obama, who can’t seem to gracefully exit the American political fray, and who arguably brought Donald Trump onto the political stage with his relentless insults against Trump during his presidency. Spanning all eight years of Obama’s tenure, the U.S. economy never achieved even one year of 3% growth. That remains a historical anomaly – Obama became the first president since World War II to never once preside over a year of 3% growth. Year after year after year, his economic policies of more regulation and higher taxes produced results that never even matched the post-war norm, let alone exceeded it.
That makes the latest 3.3% reading not only encouraging in its own right, but also a clear reminder that the Trump policy agenda outperforms the anemia of the Obama years.
Moreover, that 3.3% rebound becomes even more impressive in recent perspective, since the first quarter that the Trump Administration inherited from Joe Biden experienced a 0.5% contraction – the first quarterly decline in three years. Instead of spiraling downward or floundering, however, our economy reversed course into robust growth in just one quarter.
It also offers an amusing rebuke to those on the political left and among the Trump Derangement Syndrome victims who smugly assured us of an imminent recession throughout the spring.
According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) data, the impressive turnaround was driven principally by surging investment and consumer spending, a drop in imports, and a rise in the critical intellectual property investment sector. In plain terms, households kept spending, businesses boosted investment, and domestic output rose sharply.
Naysayers caution that the 3.3% Q2 number was skewed by temporary factors like volatile import swings or tariff-driven accelerated purchases. Even with the net of those effects, however, underlying components of consumer and business behavior were stronger than previously believed. For example, as the BEA internal data notes, private domestic demand rose by 1.9%, which offers a sign of genuine demand, not mere statistical noise.
The unexpectedly impressive 3.3% growth rate doesn’t end the story, and doesn’t guarantee that the third, fourth, or future quarters will come in equally strong. It does, however, offer an early preview of where the nation’s economy can go under the new Trump Administration and its agenda of less regulation, lower taxes, and energy sector improvement. Economic cycles will continue to surprise, external shocks may occur, and avoidable policy mistakes may yet occur.
It also reinforces the optimistic narrative that an American economy more oriented toward free markets can respond to adversity with resilience and reascension after the Biden years of inflation and loss in consumer wages and purchasing power.
With a continued emphasis from Congress and the Trump Administration on free-market principles, less regulation, and lower taxes, families, businesses, and innovators will continue buying, building, inventing, and investing, and the good news should continue.
Timothy H. Lee is Senior Vice President of legal and public affairs at the Center for Individual Freedom (www.cfif.org).
Reprinted with permission from cfif.org by Timothy H. Lee.
The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of AMAC or AMAC Action.
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