USA TODAY International Edition

CAN AMERICA AVOID A RECESSION IN 2020?

Many analysts predict slowdown in a ‘ year of uncertaint­y’

- Paul Davidson

The threat of a recession in 2020 has hovered like a dark cloud most of this year.

While the cloud still lingers, it has less become less ominous and may be receding further into the future.

The forces that threatened to topple the economy, such as the U. S. trade war with China, have become less menacing the past couple of months while three Federal Reserve interest rate cuts have made borrowing cheaper and provided a dose of steroids to the aging economic expansion.

As a result, that record- long growth will keep plugging along, but at a slower pace, as lingering jitters from the trade fight and weaker economies in other countries leave Americans on edge, and less willing to spend.

“We’re stabilizin­g at a kind of modest growth – uninspirin­g but steady,” says Barclays economist Jonathan Millar.

Besides the prospect of a trade truce with China, other developmen­ts have reduced the risk of a recession. The chances that Britain will leave the European Union without a trade deal with the continent have ebbed. And 10- year Treasury yields climbed back above three- month rates in October. That relationsh­ip had reversed in March, a yield curve “inversion” that traditiona­lly heralds a bleak outlook.

Economists polled this month by Wolters Kluwer Blue Chip Economic Indicators figure there’s a 33.1% chance of a downturn in 2020, down from 38.4% in June.

The November employment report, released early this month, bolstered confidence in the economy, which added a booming 266,000 jobs, far more than expected. Monthly payroll gains are averaging 180,000 this year, above the 150,000 to 160,000 many analysts predicted.

“We now see the risks as being more balanced,” Millar says, with the job

figures “highlighti­ng the possibilit­y that household spending may be carrying more momentum into next year.”

Whether the U. S. dodges a recession in 2020 could be pivotal in determinin­g whether President Donald Trump wins reelection next November. Economic slumps helped doom bids for second terms by presidents such as Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush, notes Diane Swonk, chief economist of Grant Thornton.

Yet this slow- speed recovery from the Great Recession of 2007- 09 has been nothing if not a Rorschach test, providing fodder for both bulls and bears.

Although most analysts expect the economy to ease into a low simmer next year, some expect it to grab a second wind. Others forecast a more dramatic slowdown that leaves recession risks elevated.

Here’s a look at the three possible outcomes:

Prevailing view: slower growth

The 51 economists surveyed by Wolters Kluwer Blue Chip reckon the economy will grow a modest 1.8% in 2020, according to their average estimate, down from 2.3% this year and a healthy 2.9% in 2018 that matched a post- recession high. The Trump- led federal tax cuts and spending increases that juiced growth last year have faded, Millar says.

Meanwhile, U. S. and Chinese officials reached a tentative phase 1 deal on Thursday, according to reports. The agreement was expected to cancel tariffs on $ 156 billion in mostly consumer- related Chinese imports that were set to take effect Dec. 15.

That would leave duties on $ 360 billion in shipments from China, though the size of the tariffs could be cut as part of the deal, according to the reports.

Millar says a partial agreement would tamp down the risk of recession but leave a fog of uncertaint­y that, along with sluggish growth abroad, takes a growing toll on American manufactur­ing and business investment.

“We’re in for a year of uncertaint­y,” says Gregory Daco of Oxford Economics.

The economists surveyed by Wolters Kluwer expect business investment to increase just 1.1% next year, half the pace of 2019, while industrial production growth slows. Manufactur­ing activity has contracted four straight months. Millar believes recent signs of a factory pick- up in Europe and China should signify that U. S. production will soon turn up but at a low level.

So far, consumers have largely been insulated from business’s woes, with consumptio­n slowing but remaining on solid footing. Household debt is low and savings are relatively high. That’s key because household spending makes up about 70% of economic activity. Yet Daco believes weak business sentiment will increasing­ly chill hiring – and thus consumer confidence and outlays – as corporate profits remain subdued and wage growth edges lower.

Another factor likely to hinder household purchases is a pullback in job growth. Millar figures average monthly payroll gains will slow to 100,000 to 125,000 next year, because of both the weakening economy and unemployme­nt that’s at a half- century low at 3.5% and spells fewer available workers.

The economists polled foresee unemployme­nt rising to an average of 3.7% next year as job growth slows. And they predict consumer spending will increase 2.3%, down from 2.6% in 2019.

Housing, meanwhile, should be a bright spot now that 30- year fixed mortgage rates have fallen to 3.68% from 4.5% early in the year, in part because of the Fed rate cuts.

Optimists: Consumers will overcome

Other economists have a more favorable view. Sure, manufactur­ing has struggled but that’s partly because of some temporary factors, such as the General Motors strike, says economist Joe LaVorgna of research firm Natixis. And manufactur­ing is invariably cyclical, he says, with pullbacks followed by rebounds.

Companies, in fact, have been drawing down the stockpiles of goods they built up early this year in anticipati­on of tariffs on Chinese imports. Goldman Sachs says the drop- off in production stemming from the swollen inventorie­s “is probably nearing in an end.”

If the economy is growing about 2% with manufactur­ing shrinking, imagine how much better it can do when factories spring back to life, LaVorgna says.

More broadly, Goldman says economists are placing too much emphasis on manufactur­ing, which makes up about 12% of the economy, and not enough on low- interest rates and a stock market that’s not far off its record high.

"We expect the strength in consumer spending to outlast the weakness in business investment,” Goldman wrote in a note to clients.

Rather than taking a bigger toll on the economy next year, the research firm expects the trade war’s impact to fade “absent further escalation.” And as unemployme­nt falls to 3.3%, Goldman says, yearly wage growth should accelerate to 3.5%, fueling more spending.

Both LaVorgna and Goldman expect the economy to pick up steam and grow about 2.5% next year.

What about that looming recession?

Goldman puts the odds at just 20%. Traditiona­lly, low unemployme­nt led to faster wage growth, sparking higher inflation and Fed rate hikes, both of which nudged the economy into a tailspin, Goldman says. But inflation has been stuck below the Fed’s 2% annual target.

There’s also little sign of any bubbles, such as run- ups in tech stocks in the late 1990s and home prices in the mid- 2000s, that derailed those expansions.

Pessimists: Uncertaint­y spreads

Some analysts believe the mainstream view understate­s the damage the trade war and sluggish global growth will inflict on consumer spending and the service sector.

“The uncertaint­y from manufactur­ing is going to likely spread,” says Scott Anderson, chief economist of Bank of the West.

Anderson already sees signs. Although consumer confidence is still solid, it has declined four straight months. And since July, the share of Americans planning to buy homes, cars and appliances the next six months has declined.

“The consumer is looking a little tired,” Anderson says.

Further tempering consumptio­n next year, he says, is a stock market that “has gotten too frothy.” Some analysts expect only modest gains after the Standard & Poor’s 500 index has shot up 25% this year.

Anderson projects the economy will grow just 1.3% next year. He sees a 40% chance of recession.

Fearing Trump could ratchet up the trade fight with China if a larger deal remains elusive, Swonk puts the odds of a downturn at 51%.

Some economists expect business investment to increase just 1.1% next year, half the pace of 2019.

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