The Two Speeds of the US Economy

Recession? Soft Landing? Getting a read on where the US economy is headed hasn’t been easy.

When it comes to the US economy today, what you see depends on where you look. Business sentiment indicators suggest a recession is imminent, while consumers seem to have a much sunnier outlook. What’s all this telling us?

To start with, this confirms that the economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic has been unique by any measure. Historical relationships between economic variables simply haven’t been a reliable gauge during this unprecedented period. Not surprisingly, forecasters who rely more on business-based indicators expect an imminent recession, while those more focused on consumer-based indicators, including the Federal Reserve, expect a soft landing.

Our forecast falls somewhere in between. We believe that the supply and demand sides of the economy meet in the labor market. And it, though strong by historical standards, has started to soften. That is likely to continue, in our view, which suggests we’ll see the broader economy slow in the months ahead. Whether it falls into recession or not remains a close call; if it does, the recession is likely to be a mild one.

A Tale of Two Outlooks

There is little doubt that businesses are skeptical of the forward outlook for the economy. The most reliable indicator of how businesses perceive the environment is the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing survey. While the index hasn’t hit recessionary levels yet, it is headed in that direction (Display).

Manufacturing Indicator Signals Recession Risk