Resilient U.S. Economy Continues to Avoid Recession -- So Far
Inflation-fighting Fed policy could still trigger a brief recession later this year, UCLA Anderson Forecast says
LOS ANGELES ,
"With core inflation coming down slowly, it's possible the Fed may continue to tighten monetary policy until we're in a recession," the report reads, adding that even with three months of additional data since the previous report, in March, "there has not been much more clarity as to the trajectory of the economy."
Consequently, as they did in the previous two quarters, Anderson Forecast economists have issued a forecast with two scenarios: one involving a recession the other without a recession.
At the conclusion of 2022, the UCLA Anderson Forecast described economic conditions that could head in different directions. As the Federal Reserve continued raising interest rates to stave off high inflation rates, uncertainty about the direction of the economy hung in the balance. Simply put, aggressive action by the Fed could eventually push the economy into a mild recession. So far, it has not, but the possibility of a recession still looms, depending on future Fed actions.
For
The important difference between the two scenarios hinges on the Fed's decisions in setting monetary policy. The Fed has said emphatically that its actions will be data-dependent. If data continue to show that the labor market remains robust — as evidenced by the latest figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics — and if another jobs report shows strong growth in payroll employment and inflation remains sticky, the Fed will likely err on the side of further tightening of monetary policy. If that scenario plays out, a mild recession later this year is the likeliest result.
Like the national outlook, the Anderson Forecast for
According to Forecast director
The Forecast anticipates that, unlike during the past four slowdowns in economic growth, there will be a mild impact on
The national forecast
Given the uncertain macroeconomic environment, the UCLA Anderson national forecast again presents two scenarios: one in which economic growth slows below long-run trends and then picks up again, and one in which the economy experiences a comparatively mild and brief recession that starts in the third quarter of 2023 and lasts through the first quarter of 2024.
The economy has remained resilient over the past year, consumers have continued to spend and, despite business leaders' earlier warnings of an imminent recession, businesses have continued investing. Whether the
Monetary policy is, of course, a moving target. The real rate of interest is what matters in determining whether policy is restrictive. The Fed sets nominal interest rates with a forecast of how those rates translate to inflation-adjusted interest rates. Recent banking stress that has led to a tightening of credit standards, and over which the Fed has less control, complicates the Fed's policy decisions.
As in the past two quarterly forecasts, the reason UCLA economists are uncertain about Federal Reserve policy is that the Fed itself seems uncertain. While the Fed has signaled that it might be time for a pause in increasing interest rates, it has also stated in numerous Federal Open Market Committee press briefings that, based on the data, a pause might not be forthcoming. Recent data on employment, job openings, personal consumption expenditures and inflation all suggest that monetary policy might not yet be as restrictive as policymakers would like it to be.
Under the recession scenario, the UCLA Anderson Forecast projects quarterly GDP growth in the second quarter of 2023 at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, or SAAR, of 1.2%, and then for the economy to contract from the third quarter of 2023 through the first quarter of 2024 before beginning to grow again in the second quarter of next year.
In the no-recession scenario, quarterly GDP growth would grow at a SAAR of 2.6% in the second quarter, and the economists do not expect quarterly GDP growth to dip too far below a 1.0% SAAR; the economy would continue to grow throughout 2023 and into 2024, but the pace of that growth would be moderate.
The
The
A number of factors — including more construction, an ample rainy-day fund for state government, increased demand for defense goods, and increased demand for labor-saving equipment and software — could lead to the no-recession path. In that scenario, the unemployment rate averages for 2023, 2024 and 2025 are expected to be 4.1%, 4.0% and 4.0%, respectively, and non-farm payroll jobs are expected to grow at rates of 2.0%, 1.3% and 1.6% during the same three years.
Also under the no-recession scenario, real personal income is forecast to grow by 2.0% in 2023, by 2.8% in 2024 and by 2.6% in 2025. In spite of higher mortgage interest rates, the continued demand for limited housing stock, coupled with new laws throughout the state that permit accessory dwelling units to be built in single-family-zoned neighborhoods, would lead to a forecast of increased homebuilding through 2025. The Forecast economists expect the number of permits to grow to 159,600 in 2025.
In the recession scenario, the
What factors led to previous "soft landings"?
In an accompanying essay,
Leamer first reports a probit monthly time series model that predicts a 90% chance that the expansion will end within 12 months of
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SOURCE UCLA Anderson Forecast
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