Bessent: 'Noninflationary Growth' Ahead Despite Housing, Job Market Struggles

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Sunday, Nov 23, 2025 9:34 pm ET1min read
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- Treasury Secretary Bessent downplays 2026 recession risks, predicting "noninflationary growth" despite housing and job market challenges.

- Kalshi secures $1B funding led by Sequoia, competing with Polymarket in prediction markets as

adoption expands.

- 2025 government shutdown caused 15-year-low job growth, with only healthcare/hospitality sectors adding 690,000 jobs.

- GOP tax cuts and regulatory reforms aim to boost growth, but high borrowing costs and

cost spikes persist as risks.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has dismissed fears of a 2026 U.S. recession,

despite challenges in sectors like housing and interest-rate-sensitive industries. His remarks come amid a broader economic landscape marked by a recent $11 billion funding round for prediction market platform Kalshi, which has drawn comparisons to rival Polymarket in the rapidly expanding fintech sector. , Kalshi's recent $1 billion funding round, led by Sequoia Capital and CapitalG, underscores investor confidence in the prediction market's potential. The platform now competes with Polymarket, which is as it re-enters the U.S. market after a regulatory hiatus. Both platforms have secured high-profile integrations with financial services like Google Finance and Robinhood, .

Bessent's optimism hinges on the implementation of the GOP's "One Big, Beautiful Bill Act," which aims to extend Trump-era tax cuts and introduce new incentives for seniors and state residents. The legislation, he argued, will catalyze growth by reducing regulatory burdens and enhancing consumer spending power. , Bessent told NBC News. However, he acknowledged that sectors such as housing and energy remain vulnerable to high interest rates and shifting demand patterns.

The economic outlook is further complicated by the aftermath of a 43-day government shutdown in late 2025,

. While Bessent emphasized that the fiscal "catch-up" effect will stabilize markets in November, the shutdown's lingering impacts are evident in the labor market. , with only health care and hospitality sectors contributing to net gains. The Bureau of Labor Statistics in these sectors this year, while overall employment has declined by 6,000.

Despite these developments, economic risks persist.

, a congressional stalemate over Affordable Care Act subsidies has pushed health-care costs higher, complicating Bessent's claims of affordability improvements. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve's -despite recent policy adjustments-has left businesses in sectors like manufacturing and construction grappling with elevated borrowing costs.

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