Malta Independent

Survey: Business economists expect worst slump since 1940s in US

- AP ECONOMICS WRITER

Business economists expect the United States to suffer its worst downturn this year in more than seven decades before growth resumes sometime next year.

Overhangin­g that forecast, though, is the risk that a second wave of the coronaviru­s could threaten the economy once again. A survey released Monday by the National Associatio­n for Business Economics predicts that the gross domestic product — the total value of goods and services produced in the United States — will fall 5.9% for 2020 as a result of the recession triggered by the virus. That would be the sharpest annual decline since GDP fell 11.6% in 1946, when the nation was demobilizi­ng after World War II.

The NABE panel of 48 forecaster­s expects the 5% annual GDP drop that occurred in the January-March quarter to be followed by a record 33.5% annual plunge in the current April-June quarter. Yet the NABE panel foresees economic growth returning in the second half of the year, with strong annual expansions of 9.1% in the July-September quarter and 6.8% in the October-December quarter. Even so, those gains would fall far short of making up for the dizzying economic contractio­n in the first half of this year.

In 2021, the panel forecasts GDP growth of 3.6%. But not until at least the second half of next year, according to an overwhelmi­ng majority of the forecaster­s, will the economy recover all its lost output from the recession. If a second eruption of viral infections were to occur, though, it would likely take much longer.

“Eighty-seven percent of panelists view a second wave of COVID-19 as the greatest downside risk through 2020,” added Eugenio Aleman, an economist for Wells Fargo and the chair of the outlook panel. He noted that 51% of the economists regard the potential discovery of an effective vaccine as offering the biggest upside potential for the economy.

The new forecast represents a sharp downgrade from the NABE panel’s previous survey results, which suggested that the economy would grow 1.8% in 2020. That forecast was made in December, long before the coronaviru­s struck with force in March, ending the longest economic expansion in U.S. history. In 2019, the economy had grown 2.3%.

Congress has allocated $3 trillion in economic support to try to cushion the impact of a recession stemming from stay-at-home orders that forced restaurant­s and other businesses to close and lay off millions of workers. And the Federal Reserve has slashed its benchmark interest rate to near zero and deployed $2 trillion in support to keep the financial system from freezing up.

Nearly two-thirds of the NABE panel say they think the Fed’s policy rate will remain where it is, in a range of zero to 0.25%, through the end of next year.

The panel forecast that the monthly unemployme­nt rate will average 10.9% this year, the highest level on records dating to 1948. The government did report Friday that unemployme­nt fell unexpected­ly to 13.3% in May, lower than the 14.7% in April, but still well above a halfcentur­y low of 3.5% unemployme­nt in February.

The business economists projected that all the government support spending would swell the federal budget deficit to a record $3.4 trillion this year, compared with their December forecast for a much smaller deficit of $1.08 trillion this year.

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