The Arizona Republic

Slowdown may be on the horizon

Economy chugging now, but some economists fear recession inevitable

- Paul Davidson

The skies of the U.S. economy are clear and sunny, but many analysts see storm clouds on the horizon.

By many measures, the economy is in its best shape since the Great Recession of 2007 to 2009. Employment hit an 18year low of 3.8 percent in May. Average wage growth is widely expected to reach 3 percent by the end of the year. And the economy is projected to grow nearly 3 percent in 2018 for just the second time since the downturn.

Yet the economic expansion is the second-longest in U.S. history, leading many economists to forecast a recession as early as next year. Half the economists surveyed last month by the National Associatio­n of Business Economics foresee a recession starting in late 2019 or in early 2020, and two-thirds are predicting a slump by the end of 2020.

Why? Precisely because things seem to be going so well.

The late stage of an economic expansion is most vulnerable to a popping of the bubble. It’s typically when unemployme­nt falls, inflation heats up, the Federal Reserve raises interest rates to cool the economy down — often going too far — and investors and consumers pull back.

“It’s just the time when it feels like all is going fabulously that we make mistakes, we overreact, we overborrow,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics.

But some other ingredient typically is needed to tip an economy into recession, Zandi says. In 1990-91, it was an oil price shock. In 2001, it was the bursting of the dotcom bubble and resulting stock market decline. In 2007, it was the housing crash.

“A recession fundamenta­lly is an outbreak of pessimism” that causes consumers and businesses to rein in spending, economist Jesse Edgerton of JPMorgan Chase says.

Things to watch

Here is the baseline scenario that could push the nation into a recession in the next couple of years:

Higher inflation, asset prices: This is the most likely road to recession. Falling unemployme­nt and rising wages are a good thing, but eventually higher pay forces companies to raise prices more sharply. The Fed’s preferred measure of annual core inflation, now at 1.8 percent, could drift past its 2 percent target for a sustained period.

That could prompt the Fed to raise rates faster — perhaps four increases in both 2018 and 2019 instead of the three now forecast. Higher rates and inflation fears push up other borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, including mortgage rates, curtailing home sales as well as household spending and business investment broadly.

Federal tax cuts and spending increases may further swell the national deficit and push up rates. Escalating trade conflicts: President Donald Trump has slapped 25 percent tariffs on steel and 10 percent on aluminum to combat what the administra­tion has called the dumping of lowpriced metals from other countries in the U.S. below market prices. That’s expected to raise prices for consumers and businesses and draw retaliatio­n from other nations against U.S. exports.

Higher energy prices: Oil price spikes have contribute­d to every recession since World War II by sapping consumer purchasing power, according to Moody’s. U.S. benchmark crude oil prices of about $65 a barrel are up from a low of about $26 in early 2016 and $59 early this year but well below the $112 reached in 2014. And average gasoline prices are just under $3 a gallon compared with more than $4 four years ago.

Yet if conflicts intensify between Iran and Saudi Arabia, threatenin­g the latter’s 10 million barrels a day in output,

that could drive oil and gas prices higher, Zandi says.

Budget battles: Early this year, Congress raised budget spending caps by about $300 billion, with most of that devoted to higher defense spending. And the nation’s debt limit must be raised in early 2019. Both issues set up dramatic showdowns in Congress.

Economist Diane Swonk of DS Economics believes the standoffs could help nudge the U.S. into recession. Remember – Congress’ failure to raise the debt limit early enough in 2011 prompted Standard & Poor’s to lower the nation’s credit rating, hammering stocks and consumer and business confidence.

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