The Everything Bubble:
GDP, AI, War & the Crash They Can't Stop
Strip away government spending and AI hype from the world's largest economy, add a war closing 20% of global oil supply, and a 50-year divergence between Wall Street and Main Street — and the picture looks nothing like the headlines.
The world economy is projected to hit $124 trillion in 2026, with the United States alone accounting for $29 trillion — more than China, Germany, and India combined. It's the kind of number that gets shared on social media with pride and awe. But what happens when you look behind it?
Strip out government expenditure. Remove the AI investment bubble. Account for a war that has closed the world's most critical oil chokepoint. What remains tells a very different story — one that three separate charts, each alarming on its own, tell together with unusual clarity.
The GDP Number Nobody Talks About
The $29 trillion US GDP figure is real. But roughly 41% of it — approximately $12 trillion — is government expenditure at the federal, state, and local level. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, defense, debt interest. Remove that, and the private-sector economy is closer to $17 trillion.
Then there's AI. Tech-related capital expenditure contributed an estimated 0.9% to GDP growth before accounting for imports — but after deducting the foreign-made chips and data center equipment that flood back out of the country, the net contribution falls to roughly 0.4–0.5 percentage points. Meaningful, but not transformative. Not yet.
The deficit funding that 41% is running at approximately 6% of GDP annually — a figure typically seen during wars or deep recessions, not relative periods of peacetime growth. The debt-to-GDP ratio sits above 124%. This is not sustainable arithmetic. It is borrowed prosperity.
Now look at other major economies. Germany spends 51% of GDP through government. France an extraordinary 57%. The UK 45%. When you rebuild the world GDP chart using only private-sector output, the rankings shift — and the totals shrink considerably.
| Country | 2026 GDP | Govt % GDP | Private GDP (est.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸 United States | $29T | 41% | ~$17T |
| 🇨🇳 China | $20.7T | ~36% | ~$13T |
| 🇩🇪 Germany | $5.3T | 51% | ~$2.6T |
| 🇮🇳 India | $4.5T | 19% | ~$3.6T |
| 🇯🇵 Japan | $4.5T | 43% | ~$2.6T |
| 🇫🇷 France | $3.6T | 57% | ~$1.5T |
| 🇬🇧 United Kingdom | $4.2T | 45% | ~$2.3T |
Wall Street vs. Main Street: A 50-Year Divergence
The second chart is harder to explain away. The S&P 500 sits at an all-time high above 7,400. The University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment Index sits at an all-time low of 44.8. In fifty years of data, these two lines have never been further apart.
"We've never seen a gap this wide between Wall Street and Main Street."
— Charlie Bilello, Creative Planning, May 24, 2026The stock market, in theory, reflects economic reality. In practice, it reflects the wealth of the top 10% of Americans who own roughly 90% of equities — people insulated from the cumulative damage of inflation, the sting of 7–8% mortgage rates, and the anxiety of a job market being reshaped by automation. Consumer sentiment captures everyone else.
And the S&P's strength is narrower than the headline suggests. Strip out the five or six mega-cap AI-adjacent stocks — Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Meta, Alphabet — and the index looks considerably more ordinary. The market is not broadly confident. It is concentrated in a single thesis: that AI will be transformative enough to justify virtually any valuation.
The 3.8% Threshold — And We're Already There
The third chart adds historical pattern to the picture. Every major market crash of the past 25 years — the dot-com collapse (−49%), the financial crisis (−57%), the 2022 rate-hike selloff (−25%) — was preceded by CPI crossing above 3.8%.
As of April 2026, the annual US inflation rate hit exactly 3.8% — the highest since May 2023. That's the trigger level. And top economic forecasters now project CPI could reach 6% in Q2 2026, driven largely by one factor: the war.
The War No One Priced In
On February 28, 2026, US and Israeli forces launched military operations against Iran. By March 4, Iran had declared the Strait of Hormuz closed — the narrow waterway through which roughly 20% of the world's oil supply and 25% of seaborne oil trade transits daily. Commercial traffic through the Strait dropped more than 90%.
The International Energy Agency called it "the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market." Brent crude surged past $120 a barrel. Qatar's LNG exports — critical for European energy — were stranded. European gas storage, already at just 30% capacity after a brutal 2025–26 winter, saw benchmark prices nearly double.
The economic word for what follows is stagflation — the combination of rising prices and stagnating growth that plagued the 1970s and that monetary policy is uniquely poorly equipped to fight. The Federal Reserve can raise rates to kill inflation, but doing so crushes an already weakening job market. It can cut rates to stimulate growth, but doing so pours fuel on the inflationary fire. It cannot do both. It is trapped.
The Global Ripple
The damage is not evenly distributed. Asia — which receives roughly 80% of Gulf oil exports — faces fuel shortages and rationing. Eurozone growth is projected to slow to just 0.5% in the second half of 2026, with risks of technical recession if the Strait disruption extends through summer. UK inflation is expected to breach 5%. Iran, Qatar, Iraq, Kuwait, and Bahrain are all projected to contract.
A UN Development Programme study estimated the war could reduce economic growth in Arab nations by $120–194 billion in GDP. A cascading debt crisis in the Global South — where governments already stretched thin face higher energy import bills and rising interest rates in developed markets — is a real risk, not a tail scenario.
The IMF put it plainly in its April 2026 World Economic Outlook — titled, revealingly, "Global Economy in the Shadow of War": a longer conflict, combined with geopolitical fragmentation and a reassessment of AI productivity expectations, could significantly weaken growth and destabilize financial markets globally.
The Convergence
Each of the charts shared this week captures one dimension of the same underlying reality. The GDP chart shows an economy propped up by borrowed money and unproven technology. The sentiment chart shows the widest gap in fifty years between asset prices and lived experience. The CPI chart shows the precise threshold — 3.8% — at which all three previous major crashes began. And the war adds the supply shock that history consistently identifies as the accelerant.
- GDP overstated by ~$12T in government deficit spending
- S&P 500 at all-time high; consumer sentiment at all-time low — never seen together
- CPI at 3.8% — the exact pre-crash level in 2000, 2008, and 2022
- 20% of global oil supply disrupted; energy prices surging
- Federal Reserve trapped — cannot cut rates without worsening inflation
- AI capex masking underlying economic softness
- Debt-to-GDP at 124% with 6% annual deficit in peacetime
- IMF explicitly warns global recession risk if conflict continues
None of this means a crash is imminent tomorrow. Bubbles can extend far longer than skeptics expect. But the conditions for one — the overvalued market, the sentiment collapse, the inflation trigger, the supply shock, the policy trap, the debt overhang — are not hypothetical warnings. They are the present situation, documented in real-time data, published this month.
The only remaining question is timing. And that, unfortunately, is the one thing no chart can tell you.
This analysis draws on data from the IMF World Economic Outlook (April 2026), US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Trading Economics, the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, the Stimson Center, Council on Foreign Relations, and Britannica's coverage of the 2026 Iran War. Charts originally published by Visual Capitalist, Barchart, and Bull Theory on X.