• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

What is a perpetual DEX? A Wall Street primer featuring Decibel

May 13, 2026

A look inside a North Country primary feud

May 13, 2026

Pop Star Hayley Williams Declares ‘F**k ICE,’ ‘Free Palestine’ at Concert

May 13, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Wednesday, May 13
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    A look inside a North Country primary feud

    May 13, 2026

    Have Trump And Musk Made Amends?

    May 13, 2026

    Trump Can Barely Walk As He Arrives In China With A Lumbering Thud

    May 13, 2026

    South Carolina Republicans tank redistricting, for now

    May 13, 2026

    Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Leaves Democratic Party

    May 13, 2026
  • Health

    Vance: $1.3B in Medicaid money to California will be deferred over fraud suspicions

    May 13, 2026

    Why Energetic Health Matters Now More Than Ever

    May 13, 2026

    The Doctor Shortage Is Getting Worse. Your Pharmacist Can Help

    May 13, 2026

    Trump DOJ intensifies push to restrict youth gender-affirming care

    May 13, 2026

    This $250 Million Startup Tracks How Cancer Reacts To Treatment In Real Time

    May 13, 2026
  • World

    Farage Says Work Begins Now to Destroy the ‘Delusional’ Establishment

    May 13, 2026

    Neil DeGrasse Tyson Ruminates On How To Handle E.T. Encounters

    May 13, 2026

    At Least Six Dead Migrants Found in Trainyard near Texas Border

    May 13, 2026

    Trump Shares AI Image Of Democrats Bathing In Feces

    May 13, 2026

    Trump Rejects Iran Reply – ‘Laughing No Longer’

    May 13, 2026
  • Business

    Another Key Inflation Measure Blows Past Forecasts

    May 13, 2026

    Prices Skyrocket To Highest Level In Years As Fallout From Iran War Continues Ravaging Economy

    May 12, 2026

    Reynolds Launches $3,200,000,000 Investment In America-Made Smokeless Nicotine

    May 8, 2026

    CEO Trolls Rival By Using Their Platform To Fund His Attempted Takeover Of Company — But They Aren’t Amused

    May 7, 2026

    Americans May Be Stuck Paying Wartime Gas Prices Long After Iran Deal

    May 7, 2026
  • Finance

    What is a perpetual DEX? A Wall Street primer featuring Decibel

    May 13, 2026

    Kevin Warsh wins Senate confirmation as the next Federal Reserve chair

    May 13, 2026

    Alibaba’s AI Business Is Booming, But Its Profits Basically Disappeared

    May 13, 2026

    Oil little changed as Trump heads to China; US oil stocks fall more than expected

    May 13, 2026

    B&G Foods positions for “transformational year” as guidance raised

    May 13, 2026
  • Tech

    EPA to Boost Reshoring, Manufacturing by Streamlining Permitting

    May 13, 2026

    ‘AI Is Here,’ ‘We Can Work With It,’ ‘You Fight It … Is a Battle We Will Lose’

    May 13, 2026

    Google Reports First Known Case of AI-Developed Zero-Day Exploit Used by Cybercriminals

    May 13, 2026

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella Takes the Stand to Defend Relationship with OpenAI

    May 13, 2026

    Suspect Allegedly Asked Chat GPT ‘How to Make Bomb’, Targeted Louvre

    May 13, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Business»Fed’s long-term GDP outlook is dismal; the economy hasn’t got the message yet
Business

Fed’s long-term GDP outlook is dismal; the economy hasn’t got the message yet

August 21, 2023No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

WASHINGTON, Aug 21 (Reuters) – After puzzling for years over the sluggish U.S. rebound from the 2007-2009 recession, the Federal Reserve had a reckoning at its policy meeting in September of 2016.

Because of poor productivity and population aging, typical U.S. economic growth of 2.5% or more annually was “not possible anymore” on a sustained basis, said John Williams, the current New York Fed president who at the time was head of the San Francisco Fed, according to transcripts of a session where policymakers cut their median long-term GDP growth outlook to 1.8%, continuing a roughly decade-long slide.

For the next three years and continuing on the other side of a world-altering pandemic, the U.S. has left that seeming constraint in the dust, with growth exceeding 1.8% in 21 of the 28 quarters since, including a period of 2.5% annual growth in the years between that 2016 Fed meeting and the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, and averaging 3% so far under President Joe Biden.

Reuters Graphics

The pandemic, with its massive hit to growth in two of those quarters in 2020 and the multi-trillion-dollar government response that followed, clouds an understanding of emerging trends.

But when policymakers gather later this week for an annual Fed research symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming that will be focused on “structural shifts,” they will have to grapple with an economy in deep flux – from U.S. labor force growth that has been better than anticipated, a manufacturing construction surge, changing global supply chains, continued high inflation, and, now, hints of improving productivity.

It’s unlikely they’ll abandon their muted view of U.S. economic potential. Slower population growth is wired into the U.S. outlook at this point, immigration remains a politically-charged issue, and better productivity, the other key driver of growth, is hard to anticipate.

Economists at investment firm BlackRock in essays this month pivoted towards an even harsher view of what they deemed “full-employment stagnation,” with potential U.S. growth as low as 1% as the baby boom generation retires, inflation remains volatile, and worker shortages persist.

See also  The Japanese Companies Pursuing a Hydrogen Economy

But policymakers have been surprised enough in recent years that a larger conversation is beginning – some of it couched in technical analysis of whether, for example, underlying interest rates have moved higher, some in the blunt observation that people keep behaving differently than the experts expect.

From September 2016 through 2019, for example, the U.S. labor force grew about twice as fast as the moribund 0.5% a year Fed staff saw as the likely trend, a pace sustained once the number of available workers recovered in 2022 from a pandemic-driven downturn to its prior high.

“The ability to pull people into the labor force … was much higher than even advocates thought,” said Adam Posen, a former Bank of England policymaker who is now president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. He called the U.S. central bank’s misreading of the issue “a major failure” that can mar analysis of where the economy stands.

IS IT MOSTLY FISCAL?

For available workers to add to economic output, however, they have to have something to do. Since 2016, policies from the vastly different Trump and Biden administrations have combined in a sort of accidental complementarity to keep both job and economic growth above the Fed’s estimate of potential.

Under former President Donald Trump, corporate tax cuts and other changes pushed growth higher in ways that surprised the central bank, while under his successor, President Joe Biden, an array of energy- and technology-related industrial policies, with infrastructure spending also in the pipeline, has triggered a boom in manufacturing construction. Both presidents added to pandemic recovery programs that may still be boosting consumer and local government spending.

Trump’s pre-COVID years ended with the unemployment rate at 3.5% in February 2020; it has been essentially at that level since March of 2022 under Biden, with the economy still adding roughly 200,000 jobs per month.

It isn’t sustainable, said Dana Peterson, chief economist at the Conference Board think tank. Driven by government tax and spending policies, the run of above-potential growth doesn’t reflect any underlying shift in economic performance – at least not yet – and now faces two obstacles, she said.

See also  Inflation Surges Above Expectations Despite Fed’s Rate Hikes

One is rising public debt. While some of the money borrowed in recent years could lift economic performance over time with improved infrastructure or other projects, Peterson said the net outcome is likely a drag on growth and private investment.

The other is the Fed. The central bank is fighting an outbreak of high inflation, largely linked to the pandemic and the response to it, with high interest rates designed precisely to force economic growth below trend.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak at the Jackson Hole conference on Friday.

The Fed has raised interest rates by 5.25 percentage points since March 2022 in its bid to tame the surge in inflation, but so far it has not seen as much response from the economy as expected. U.S. output grew at a 2.4% annual pace in the second quarter, and may be poised for a strong third quarter as well. While many economists feel a slowdown is coming, the longer growth remains robust the more the Fed may feel it needs to lean on the economy.

Median Fed policymaker projections of potential U.S. economic growth have slid from a level around 2.5% a decade ago to 1.8% as of June 2023, when the last projections were issued.

“In the next six to 12 months you probably have a recession and that is a function of the Fed,” the Conference Board’s Peterson said. “After that is done we will shift to a phase of slower growth.”

Reuters Graphics

NEW PRODUCTIVITY REGIME?

An alternative view harkens to former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan’s hunch in the mid-1990s that quickening economic growth stemmed from technological improvements that paved the way for workers to produce more per hour, allowing the economy to grow faster without raising inflation. Under pressure from colleagues to raise interest rates as the economy accelerated, Greenspan resisted and accommodated the expansion instead of fighting it.

See also  Economy at critical juncture in inflation fight: central-bank body

At the onset of the pandemic some economists suggested that changes in the application of technology or the shift to remote work might boost worker output.

As of last year’s Jackson Hole conference, San Francisco Fed economist and productivity expert John Fernald and his colleague Huiyu Li said in a paper that while the pandemic had rearranged some industry trends, it had not changed the underlying “slow-growth regime” of productivity increasing about 1.1% a year. By contrast, productivity rose about 2.5% a year from 1995 to 2005, they noted.

Yet productivity jumped by a 3.7% annualized rate in the second quarter of this year, and expectations for a strong boost in the current three-month period “offer glimmers of hope that trend productivity is picking up,” Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan, wrote this month. He concluded the change “could have some legs,” with rising investment in software and information processing possibly pointing to the diffusion of artificial intelligence applications.

It may not matter much to the Fed with inflation still running high. But it could help economic growth continue even as prices cool, another prop for the “soft landing” the Fed hopes to engineer and possible evidence of rising potential.

“It is very hard to extrapolate recent years into any reassessment of longer-term conditions,” said Antulio Bomfim, head of global macro for the global fixed income group at Northern Trust Asset Management and a former senior adviser to Powell. But “having said that … I would see the balance of risks as being to the upside.”

Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao

: .

Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

Covers the U.S. Federal Reserve, monetary policy and the economy, a graduate of the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins University with previous experience as a foreign correspondent, economics reporter and on the local staff of the Washington Post.

Dismal Economy Feds GDP hasnt LongTerm Message outlook
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Another Key Inflation Measure Blows Past Forecasts

May 13, 2026

Prices Skyrocket To Highest Level In Years As Fallout From Iran War Continues Ravaging Economy

May 12, 2026

Indonesia’s Fiscal Outlook in a Period of Divergent Signals

May 12, 2026

Warren Buffett sends blunt message on mortgages, home financing

May 9, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Are Wall Street Analysts Predicting PPL Corporation Stock Will Climb or Sink?

May 8, 2026

The Geopolitical Ripple: How China-US Tensions Reshape Business in Latin America

December 20, 2023

Canada Lectures U.N. on ‘Systemic Racism’ amid Nazi Homage Scandal

September 29, 2023

Saudi National Bank loses over $1 billion on Credit Suisse investment

March 20, 2023
Don't Miss

What is a perpetual DEX? A Wall Street primer featuring Decibel

Finance May 13, 2026

Financial markets are beginning to move beyond the traditional opening bell. While stock exchanges still…

A look inside a North Country primary feud

May 13, 2026

Pop Star Hayley Williams Declares ‘F**k ICE,’ ‘Free Palestine’ at Concert

May 13, 2026

EPA to Boost Reshoring, Manufacturing by Streamlining Permitting

May 13, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,359)
  • Entertainment (4,479)
  • Finance (3,357)
  • Health (2,025)
  • Lifestyle (1,876)
  • Politics (3,212)
  • Sports (4,178)
  • Tech (2,086)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (4,226)
Our Picks

Switching meat and milk for plant-based copies misses vital nutrients

April 20, 2023

‘Kids Are Busy Playing TikTok:’ Billionaire John Catsimatidis Expresses Concern Over Gen Z’s Work Ethic

May 17, 2023

Former AG Bill Barr Calls For Military Action Against Drug Cartels Inside Mexico’s Border

March 7, 2023
Popular Posts

What is a perpetual DEX? A Wall Street primer featuring Decibel

May 13, 2026

A look inside a North Country primary feud

May 13, 2026

Pop Star Hayley Williams Declares ‘F**k ICE,’ ‘Free Palestine’ at Concert

May 13, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.