The macroeconomic narrative shifts from recession to soft landing. The post Is the Fed Close to Achieving a Soft Landing for the US? appeared first on Tokenist.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released the quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) data on Thursday. Although subject to further revision in August, the Q2 GDP data shows a 2.4% annual growth, an uptick from Q1’s 2.0% economic growth.
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Contradictory Macro Signals
Based on these macro tailwinds, on Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell stated that his team of experts is “no longer forecasting a recession.” But is the GDP growth indicative of an actual soft landing?
The Origin of the Positive GDP Growth
Other factors include real consumer spending, employment rate, and real personal income. The latest BEA data show mixed signals. As subtracted from taxes and other mandatory payments and adjusted for inflation, real disposable personal income increased by 2.5%, compared to an 8.5% increase in the previous quarter.
On the other hand, the personal savings rate, as a percentage of disposable income, increased slightly at 4.4% in Q2 compared to 4.3% in Q1. The big metric is consumer spending, accounting for over two-thirds of the US economy. The Commerce Department reported a significant uptick in consumer spending in June, at 0.4% adjusted for inflation, compared to 0.2% in May.
Aside from consumer spending, GDP increase comes from nonresidential fixed investments, private inventory investments, and an increase in federal government spending.
Economic Activity Still Running on Debt Fumes
On the positive side, the structure of the mortgage debt is one of the critical reasons for the recession being stalled. That’s because most family mortgages have been locked under 3% interest, accounting for $13.5 trillion, per the Bloomberg MBS (mortgage-backed securities) index.
Therefore, this enormous debt pool was unaffected by the Fed’s aggressive hiking schedule. In the meantime, interest payments are breaking all prior ceilings because the interest rate is at the highest level in 22 years.
Rapid debt escalation, resulting in a budget deficit deepening to $1.4 trillion in the first nine months of FY 2023, means the government has tighter maneuvering space. It then becomes a race between tax collection to service debt instead of improving economic growth.
Labor Market Resilience Still in Play
In addition to the aforementioned housing market resilience, the labor market is still tight. Across multiple FOMC meetings, Jerome Powell noted that labor market conditions would have to be loosened (lost jobs) to bring inflation to the 2% target.
While the Fed has a dual mandate to maintain price stability and low unemployment, the former is now prioritized.
“Without price stability, the economy doesn’t work for anyone. In particular, without price stability, we will not achieve a sustained period of strong labor market conditions that benefit all.”
Fed Chair Jerome Powell at Wednesday’s press conference
“Well, that’s a hundred basis-point rise. So by definition, that is a recession. Now, anyone who thinks that that’s a soft landing is spitting in the face of 150 years of history.”
Talk of Resilient Economy on Fragile Grounds
The problem is that type of phrasing has been floated before, just before the Great Recession of 2008.
In the end, the cyclic nature of a debt-based economy points to a deleveraging process. Whether that is soft or hard is yet to be seen.
Will the doomsayers be proven correct by the year’s end, or will the economic downturn be diffused? Let us know in the comments below.