Detroit Free Press

Poll asks: Is country headed for recession?

Most financial experts don’t see slump within 12 months

- Paul Davidson

Is the U.S. about to be socked by a recession? It depends on whom you ask. And the day of the week.

Fifty-four percent of economists at companies and trade groups put the odds of a downturn in the next 12 months at 50% or less. Forty-four percent say there’s a better than even chance of a slump, according to a survey conducted April 4-12 by the National Associatio­n of Business Economics.

That marks a reversal from NABE’s January poll of a similar group that found 54% viewing a recession within 12 months as probable.

Their somewhat brighter outlook is likely tied to improved sales at their companies, says Ken Simonson, a NABE analyst and the chief economist at Associated General Contractor­s, a trade group for the constructi­on industry.

Forty-six percent of the economists surveyed reported rising sales at their firms over the past three months and just 17% cited falling sales. In January, 38% pointed to rising sales and 30% said business was dropping.

Also, Simonson says, “Inflation has eased, employment is still growing.” And supply chain bottleneck­s have improved significan­tly, he says.

The businesses surveyed are NABE members and include manufactur­ers and service companies.

The poll was conducted after the Labor Department reported that employers added 236,000 jobs in March, a historical­ly strong total but a notable slowdown from early in the year.

The survey, however, came after news that retail sales and industrial production both declined in March, developmen­ts that led some economists to see a downturn as growing more likely.

That more dour outlook was already gaining traction after the Silicon Valley Bank crisis led banks to make loans harder to obtain for consumers and businesses.

Simonson says he doesn’t think the more recent reports on retail sales and manufactur­ing would have changed the outlook of the NABE experts.

Still, the survey paints a decidedly mixed picture of the economy.

Just 15% of the economists said employment increased at their companies during the past three months, the smallest share since October 2020. And just 15% expect employment to rise over the next three months while 19% expect payrolls to fall.

Those numbers are consistent with an economy that could well shed jobs in coming months, Simonson says, and job losses often correlate with recession.

The fuzzy outlook depicted in the poll reflects a recession that has been predicted since early 2022 but repeatedly gets pushed back. The Federal Reserve has been aggressive­ly hiking interest rates over the past year in an effort to weaken the economy enough to curtail a pandemic-related inflation spike, a campaign that’s expected to tip the economy into a slide.

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