Business Economists Cut US Growth Forecast

“NABE Outlook Survey panelists believe the U.S. economy has reached an inflection point,” the group's president says.

The National Association of Business Economists has joined the Federal Reserve and Business Roundtable in downgrading its outlook for U.S. growth this year and next.

The 55 business economists who contribute to the NABE outlook survey are now forecasting GDP growth, adjusted for inflation, of 2.4% this year, down from 2.7% previously, and 2% growth next year.

“NABE Outlook Survey panelists believe the U.S. economy has reached an inflection point,” said NABE President Kevin Swift, chief economist of the American Chemistry Council, in a statement.

Three-quarters of respondents see more downside risks, compared with 6% who see more upside, and a majority blame trade policy and slower global growth for the downside tilt.

Despite the more pessimistic outlook, NABE economists give low odds for a recession this year — around 20% — and just 35% odds for a recession in 2020.

“In part this reflects the federal Reserve’s dovish policy U-turn in January,” said Survey Chair Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, presumably referring to the minutes of the January meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee. The survey was conducted from Feb. 22 to March 7, before the Fed’s March 19-20 meeting.

The January minutes showed that officials favored ending the shrinking of the Fed’s balance sheet and were uncertain about raising rates again in 2019. In March, Fed policymakers were even more dovish, indicating that they likely won’t raise rates at all this year while slowing the drawdown of its balance sheet before ending the runoff in September.

A near majority of respondents anticipated only one more rate hike this year, but it’s important to remember that they were surveyed before the Fed’s latest policy announcement. Interestingly, 30% of respondents do not expect an inversion of the yield curve — between the 3-month Treasury bill and 10-year Treasury note — before the next recession. Almost every recession since 1955 has been preceded by an inverted yield curve, though the lag time before a recession can range from 6 months to 2 years, according to economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

Other highlights of the survey include expectations for:

— Related on ThinkAdvisor: