Americans Are About to Get a Lot Richer
There's a piece of data that almost nobody is paying attention to that is, right now, telling a story about the United States that most people on the coasts simply cannot feel. It starts with a weird question: why is it nearly impossible to book a flatbed truck? Not a refrigerated truck. Not a standard dry van. The flatbed specifically. No walls, no roof, cargo sitting in the open air getting rained on. The kind that only makes sense when your cargo physically cannot go inside a box — steel coils, heavy equipment, lumber. The workhorse of industrial America. When the price to hire one doubles and companies pay it anyway, that's not a complaint. That's a choice. And choices like that don't lie. We pulled the thread on this with Craig Fuller, founder of FreightWaves, who runs what is arguably the best real-time freight intelligence platform in the country. What he laid out completely reframed how we were looking at the US economy. For thirty years, the freight heat map of this country looked the same: hot at the coasts where the ports are, quiet in the middle. Today that map is almost inverted. The I-35 corridor, the old Rust Belt, the industrial spine of the country is running at a pace it hasn't hit in two decades. And it has nothing to do with the ports. This video traces what that signal actually means — and connects it to black swans, penicillin, a $150 billion data center arms race, and a productivity chart that should probably be getting more attention than it is. By the end of it, you'll understand why I said something I've never said before. Topics covered: Why freight data is one of the few economic signals that genuinely cannot be faked The I-35 corridor and the inversion of thirty years of US freight patterns Why flatbed rejection rates specifically point to industrial activity, not consumer demand Black swans: the ones that make headlines, and the more powerful ones that don't AI productivity vs internet productivity, and what the gap between them might mean Why Big Tech spending $150B+ a year racing each other might be the most accidental stimulus in American history #USEconomy #Manufacturing #FreightData #Trucking #Flatbed #Economics #AI #Productivity #BlackSwan #IndustrialRevival #Maxinomics #Tariffs #SupplyChain #ChatGPT #DataCenters #americanmanufacturing Follow Craig Fuller on X: https://x.com/FreightAlley Follow Maxinomics on social: X: https://x.com/maxinomics Instagram: / maxinomicsmb TikTok: / maxinomics Producer: Phil Andrews (the guy in the videos and the comments) Video Editor: Christie Muldoon Motion Graphics: Luca Depardon Director of Production Services: Sam Wolf Thumbnail: Tom Grillo Franchise Content Producer: Tariq Abdellatif President, Morning Brew: Devin Emery

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