The Morning Call

Recession likely later in the year, survey says

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON — A majority of the nation’s business economists expect a U.S. recession to begin later this year than they had previously forecast, after a series of reports have pointed to a surprising­ly resilient economy despite steadily higher interest rates.

Fifty-eight percent of 48 economists who responded to a survey by the National Associatio­n for Business Economics envision a recession sometime this year, the same proportion who said so in the NABE’s survey in December. But only a quarter think a recession will have begun by the end of March, only half the proportion who had thought so in December.

The findings, reflecting a survey of economists from businesses, trade associatio­ns and academia, were released Monday.

A third of the economists who responded to the survey now expect a recession to begin in the April-June quarter. One-fifth think it will start in the July-September quarter.

The delay in the economists’ expectatio­ns of when a downturn will begin follows a series of government reports that have pointed to a still-robust economy even after the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates eight times in a strenuous effort to slow growth and curb high inflation.

In January, employers added more than a half-million jobs, and the unemployme­nt rate reached 3.4%, the lowest level since 1969.

And sales at retail stores and restaurant­s jumped 3% in January, the sharpest monthly gain in nearly two years.

That suggested that consumers as a whole, who drive most of the economy’s growth, still feel financiall­y healthy and willing to spend.

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