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What happens when the US Government opens back up?

by admin November 10, 2025
November 10, 2025

40 days and still counting. That’s how long the world’s largest economy has been running with one hand tied behind its back due to the US Government shutdown.

Federal workers furloughed, data frozen, and confidence wearing thin.

The United States entered the longest government shutdown in its history at midnight on October 1, 2025, a political standoff that cut through every layer of the system.

Now, as the Senate edges toward a deal, the question transitions from how long this lasts to what happens after the lights come back on.

A shutdown that became a stress test

The government shutdown of 2025 began with Congress unable to agree on how to fund the government for the new fiscal year.

The fight started in the House, where Republicans pushed through a spending bill stripped of Affordable Care Act subsidy extensions.

Senate Democrats refused to back it. The bill was rejected 14 times. What followed was the slow grinding down of federal activity.

Essential agencies stayed open, but millions of workers were either furloughed or working without pay. Social programs faced delays. SNAP benefits began to dry up in several states. National parks closed.

The Federal Aviation Administration scaled back operations, leading to more than a thousand flight cancellations.

The shutdown’s reach was extended beyond just logistics. Economic data stopped flowing. The Bureau of Labor Statistics could not release the Consumer Price Index or Producer Price Index.

The Federal Reserve was left blindfolded ahead of the latest press conference. Investors were also flying blind without key inflation indicators.

Most importantly, the US economy was bleeding dollars on a weekly basis.

Source: Bloomberg

A political deal within reach?

As the shutdown stretched into November, the pressure inside Washington began to change. On November 9, Senate leaders reached a procedural breakthrough.

Sixty senators voted to advance a bipartisan bill that would reopen the government until January 2026. Eight Democrats broke with party leadership to move it forward.

The proposed deal, however is temporary. It restores government operations, reverses some federal layoffs, and introduces new worker protections.

It does not extend ACA subsidies, the key Democratic demand, but it commits to a separate vote on those in December. It’s more of a truce, rather than a settlement.

For President Trump, the standoff has been about leverage. He framed the issue as a demand for Democrats to reopen the government before revisiting healthcare spending.

The Senate compromise gives him an off-ramp without immediate political loss, while allowing Democrats to claim progress on worker protections and a scheduled healthcare vote.

The deal is expected to clear the Senate and move to the House this week. If signed, agencies could begin reopening within 48 hours.

Markets breathe, but only a little

Financial markets reacted to the Senate vote before the ink was dry.

Stock futures rose Sunday night, with the S&P 500 gaining 0.7%, Nasdaq-100 futures climbing1.24%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average adding 76 points. It was a much-needed relief rally after a rough week.

The Nasdaq 100 Index had just posted its worst week since the tariff-driven selloff in April, falling 3%.

The S&P 500 dropped 1.6%, and the Dow lost 1.2%. Investors had been balancing two fears: political paralysis and overstretched tech valuations. The shutdown simply amplified both.

With trading volumes thinner than usual, markets have been moving on headlines rather than fundamentals.

The lack of government data has forced analysts to rely on private surveys and corporate guidance, creating wider gaps between perception and reality.

Once the shutdown ends, those gaps will start closing quickly, which often means volatility returns in a different form.

What reopening really means

When the government reopens, much of the lost activity will reappear on paper.

Agencies will release delayed data, pay back wages, and resume procurement. GDP figures will show a rebound. But that rebound reflects work postponed and not new growth.

Furloughed workers receiving back pay will mostly use it to refill depleted savings or pay down overdue bills. The extra income doesn’t create a spending wave; it restores balance.

The same pattern followed the 2019 shutdown under Trump’s first term. The economic scars are shallow but visible, showing up in consumer credit and short-term spending surveys.

The sudden release of stacked economic data will also distort perception. Inflation and labor metrics could appear stronger or weaker depending on timing, and markets tend to overreact to the first numbers out of the gate.

Economists call this the “data whiplash” phase. The period when analysts recalibrate models that have been starved of official figures.

At the same time, the return of data ends a kind of artificial calm. Investors have spent six weeks trading without the usual macro signals. Once the reports resume, attention will swing back to valuations, earnings, and interest-rate expectations.

The temporary unity that came from blaming politics will dissolve into old arguments about growth and pricing.

The next deadline is already written

Even if the current deal passes, it only funds the government through January.

The real fights over healthcare subsidies, social spending, and fiscal targets, are postponed, not resolved. In that sense, reopening sets the clock for the next confrontation.

Repeated shutdowns change behavior. Agencies plan budgets with political disruption in mind, prioritizing programs that cause public pain when paused. Lawmakers have learned that visible inconvenience carries bargaining power.

This dynamic ensures that shutdowns are no longer accidents; they are tools.

The normalization of shutdowns also erodes the reliability of US fiscal governance. Each episode chips away at investor confidence in the smooth functioning of the state, even if the Treasury keeps paying its bills.

Over time, this feeds into the risk premium embedded in US assets, small but cumulative.

For now, the political system is focused on reopening. The markets are relieved, consumers exhausted, and economists waiting for data to flow again.

The relief will be real but fleeting. Once federal offices reopen and numbers start landing on screens, the story will shift from paralysis to performance.

The government may be back in business, but the next argument is already scheduled.

The post What happens when the US Government opens back up? appeared first on Invezz

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