Fed’s Unemployment Estimates to Rise as Recession Warnings Pick Up

Federal Reserve officials are set to increase their 2023 unemployment projections for a third straight time amid warnings that their inflation-fighting campaign increasingly risks tipping the US economy into a recession.

Economists polled by Bloomberg expect Fed officials to project unemployment rising to 4.6% by the end of 2023 in quarterly forecasts to be updated on Wednesday. That would compare with their median projection of 4.4% in September, and potentially mean 1.5 million more people out of work than now.

Such an increase in the unemployment rate without a recession would be unprecedented. Most private-sector forecasters now see the US entering a downturn in 2023, and the Fed’s own staff economists warned last month that the odds of such an outcome were about 50-50.

If you’re the Fed, “you want to communicate commitment to doing what you need to do on inflation,” said Julia Coronado, president of MacroPolicy Perspectives in Austin, Texas. “The focus is bringing that down. One element of that is at least better balance in the labor market, if not outright higher unemployment.”

On Wednesday, the Fed is widely expected to lift the target range for its benchmark interest rate by a half-percentage point to 4.25% to 4.5%, the highest level since 2008. The updated projections will probably also reveal that Fed officials now expect to take rates to nearly 5% next year, instead of the 4.6% level they projected in September.