NEW YORK: To hear some of the chatter in financial markets and corporate America’s C-suites, a United States recession is imminent and inevitable. Not necessarily so.
While the danger of a downturn has risen as growth has slowed, most economists argue a contraction is unlikely in the immediate future, given the continued strength of the jobs market and the more than US$2 trillion (RM8.78 trillion) in excess cash on household balance sheets.
It’s next year they’re more worried about, as the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) continuing interest-rate hikes increasingly bite and decades-high inflation eats into that cash surplus.
But even then, an economic decline isn’t a slam dunk. Ex-Fed official and Deutsche Bank AG economist Peter Hooper was among the first to forecast a recession, and puts the odds of one happening next year at 70%-plus. Yet he says he can still see some scenarios for avoiding one.
That would, to use the words of treasury secretary Janet Yellen, take luck and skill on the part of the Fed as it seeks to rein in surging prices.
Success will also depend on forces beyond the central bank’s control – a point Fed chair Jerome Powell himself has made, amid supply-chain shocks caused by the pandemic and Russia’s Ukraine war.
Based on the critical assumption that the worst economic effects of Covid-19 and the war are behind, Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi is betting the Fed can pull it off.
“I still think we’re going to navigate through without a recession. But obviously it’s going to be very, very tight because risks are very high,” he said.
A lot is at stake. A recession would likely throw hundreds of thousands of Americans out of work and trigger another big downdraft in the stock market.
It would also spell further trouble for president Joe Biden, whose Democrats are already on the back foot in defending thin congressional majorities in November’s midterm vote.
Biden has touted the latest sign of strength in the jobs market even as he acknowledged it’s likely to be overshadowed in American minds by the pain of sky-high inflation.
Cracks are starting to show in an economy that’s coming off a growth rate that last year reached the highest since 1984. The housing market is buckling under the impact of a big jump in mortgage rates engineered by the Fed, with new home sales plummeting in April by the most in nearly nine years.
Technology companies that prospered during the height of the pandemic are retrenching and cutting staff.
And retailers like Walmart Inc and Target Corp are trimming their earnings forecasts as they struggle with surging costs.
That’s set off alarm bells on Wall Street. The Nasdaq composite stock index has slumped into a bear market, while corporate bond spreads have widened to reflect a growing risk of recession.
Some corporate chieftains are working the worry beads too. Bigwigs from JPMorgan Chase & Co chief executive officer Jamie Dimon and billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk to Gary Friedman, the head of furniture retailer RH, voiced wariness this week about the possibility of a downturn.
Megan Greene, global chief economist at the Kroll Institute, said such concerns were premature.
Consumers, the bulwark of the economy, still have a lot of financial firepower built up from earlier in the pandemic, when they were cooped up at home and showered with stimulus checks from the federal government.
And while the real estate market is turning, many are still benefiting from appreciated property valuations.
Adding to collective consumer firepower is the rising number of employed people across the economy, with the May jobs report showing a 390,000 gain in payrolls and an unemployment rate holding close to a half-century low.
But inflation will continue to eat away at households’ nest eggs, making next year’s outlook more fraught.
“I don’t think we’re going into recession in the next 12 months,” Greene said. “It’s the 12 months after that, that I’m worried about.”
The fate of the economy in 2023 ultimately will depend on what happens with inflation and how high the Fed will have to raise interest rates to reduce it to acceptable levels.
The Fed’s favorite inflation measure rose an annual 6.3% in April, more than triple the central bank’s 2% target.
Another plus for the Fed: Investors, consumers and businesses seem convinced that, in time, it can get inflation under control, surveys and bond-market indicators showed. — Bloomberg