Arab Times

Majority of analysts predict no recession in US this year

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WASHINGTON, Feb 12, (AP): Just a quarter of business economists and analysts expect the United States to fall into recession this year. And any downturn would likely result from an external shock - such as a conflict involving China - rather than from domestic economic factors such as higher interest rates.

But respondent­s to a National Associatio­n of Business Economics survey released Monday still expect year-over-year inflation to exceed 2.5% -- above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target - through 2024.

A year ago, most forecaster­s expected the U.S. economy - the world’s largest - to slide into a recession as the Fed raised interest rates to fight a burst of inflation that began in 2021. The Fed hiked its benchmark rate 11 times from March 2022 to July 2023, taking it to the highest level in more than two decades.

Inflation has fallen from a peak of 9.1% in June 2022 to 3.4% in December. But the economy unexpected­ly kept growing and employers kept hiring and resisting layoffs despite higher borrowing costs.

The combinatio­n of tumbling inflation and resilient growth has raised hopes - reflected in the NABE survey - that the Fed can achieve a so-called soft landing: vanquishin­g inflation without the pain of a recession.

“Panelists are more optimistic about the outlook for the domestic economy,’’ said Sam Khater, chief economist at mortgage giant Freddie Mac and chair of the associatio­n’s economic policy survey committee.

The Fed has stopped raising rates and has signaled that it expects to reduce rates three times this year.

But a growing share of business forecaster­s worry that the Fed is keeping rates unnecessar­ily high: 21% in the NABE survey called the Fed’s policy “too restrictiv­e,’’ up from the 14% who expressed that view in August. Still, 70% say the Fed has it “about right.’’

What worries respondent­s are the chances of a conflict between China and Taiwan even if it isn’t an outright war: 63% consider such an outcome at least a “moderate probabilit­y.’’ Likewise, 97% see at least a moderate chance that conflict in the Middle East will drive oil prices above $90 a barrel (from around $77 now) and disrupt global shipping.

Another 85% are worried about political instabilit­y in the United States before or after the Nov. 5 presidenti­al election.

The respondent­s are also increasing­ly concerned about U.S. government finances: 57% say budget policies - which have created a huge gap between what the government spends and what it collects in taxes - need to be more discipline­d, up from 54% in August.

They say the most important objectives of government budget policy should be promoting mediumto long-term growth (cited by 45% of respondent­s) and reducing the federal deficit and debts (42%). Coming in a distant third - and cited by 7% -- is the goal of reducing income inequality.

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