Two Federal Reserve banks warn
of near-recession conditions as US presidential campaign is getting underway
DAVID P. GOLDMAN
US President Donald Trump’s
case for re-election in 2020 comes down to his economic record. New forecasts
from two Federal Reserve banks, though, warn of near-recession conditions just
as the presidential election campaign is getting underway.
Both the New York Federal
Reserve “Nowcast” model and the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s “GDPNow” model
predict that US economic growth will slow to barely above zero during 2019’s
fourth quarter. Both models translate the latest data releases from government
agencies into overall GDP growth. The NY Fed’s forecast stands at 0.4%
annualized GDP growth and the Atlanta Fed model shows just 0.3%. This degree of
convergence is rare, and the dip from an estimated 1.9% growth rate during the
third quarter to 0.3%-0.4% is alarming.
Eighteen months ago the Trump
Administration advertised the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s forecast as proof of
its success. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin told
CNBC in June 2018, “The Atlanta Fed is projecting 4.7% [GDP growth]. I have
no idea whether it will be that high. But a year ago, people were laughing when
we talked about 3% GDP. We have an economy that’s here because of the president’s
tax plan and the president’s regulatory relief.”
The administration isn’t
bragging about the Atlanta Fed’s present forecast of just 0.3% annualized GDP
growth.
Since then GDP growth has
fallen below 2%, as businesses cancel capital investment plans in response to
uncertainty about global supply chains, following the Trump Administration
tariff war on China and threatened bans on technology exports to Chinese
companies. Consumer spending kept the economy growing despite shrinking CapEx
and a manufacturing recession that is now in its third quarter. At just 12% of
GDP, the manufacturing recession isn’t enough to tip the overall economy into
recession.
The new Fed forecasts
indicate that US consumers are nearing exhaustion.
If the Trump Administration
goes through with its threat to impose a new 25% tariff on an additional $160
billion of Chinese imports, including most consumer electronics, the US economy
is likely to tip over the edge into recession in 2020.
With a $1 trillion budget
deficit and an expanding Federal Reserve balance sheet, the US economy has
generated enough demand to keep GDP growth close to 2% during the past couple
of quarters. But the consumer shows signs of flagging. Retail sales were up
just 3% year-on-year as of the preliminary October release from the US Census
Bureau. With core inflation rising at a 2.3% annual rate, that puts real retail
sales growth at well under 1% – not enough to carry an economy burdened by
declining CapEx and industrial output.
Auto sales have been negative
year on year through most of 2019.
A breakdown of the
year-on-year change in dollar volume at the same stores published by the
private data firm Spendtrend shows that consumers have reduced purchases of
higher-end discretionary products.
Part of the reason for weaker
than expected retail sales growth is that consumers are saving a bigger
proportion of their income. The personal savings rate has risen from about 6%
of disposable income at the time of Trump’s inauguration to about 8.5% now.
Heightened precautionary
savings by US consumers is consistent with gloomier expectations about the
labor market, according to the Conference Board’s latest monthly survey. The
percentage of Americans who believe that jobs will be more plentiful in six
months from an early 2017 peak of 24% to only 16% today, close to the
slow-growth years of the Obama administration.
Another indicator of risk
aversion can be inferred from the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s data series for
wage growth among people who remain in their jobs vs. those who switch jobs.
Job stayers prefer security to the prospect of a raise, while job switchers are
more risk-friendly.
As the chart makes clear, the
overall level of wage growth for US workers is close to the level of job
stayers during the past few months. In early 2017, by contrast, the overall
level was closer to that of job switchers. That means, simply, that more people
are keeping their present job rather than taking the risk of switching in
return for higher pay.
Investment, meanwhile, remains
weak and fell sharply into the negative during the third quarter.
With manufacturing still
contracting and capital investment shrinking, a modest pullback by US consumers
would realize the glum forecasts of the New York and Atlanta Federal Reserve
banks.
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