Governments never suspend economic data because things are going well. When a government stops publishing the very numbers it insists are the foundation of policy—GDP, CPI, PPI, employment—you are looking at the final stage of the collapse in confidence. The US government would be eager to publish this data despite the shutdown if the figures were optimistic.
GDP, inflation, PPI, and the jobs report are the four pillars the government uses to claim the economy is “strong” or “transitory.” Rest assured, those at the top will have access to the data. The absence of data in the public sphere tells you more than the data themselves ever could.
Governments will become more authoritarian, more secretive, and more desperate as this wave continues. Once confidence breaks, they will do anything to prevent the population from realizing the depth of the crisis they themselves created. They manipulate statistics when times are tough; they suspend them when manipulation is no longer enough.
This aligns perfectly with the Economic Confidence Model as we move toward 2026—the political panic cycle. Governments cannot maintain the illusion of competence when capital flows shift against them. By refusing to publish these numbers, they are admitting, indirectly, that the economic deterioration is accelerating faster than they can spin. They fear the headlines, the market reaction, and above all, the realization by the public that the emperor has no clothes.