More Economists See U.S. Recession Ahead, NABE Says (Update1)
By Courtney Schlisserman
Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) -- The number of economists forecasting
the U.S. will slip into recession almost doubled over the last
two months, according to a survey by the National Association
for Business Economics.
Nine of 50 economists pegged the odds of a contraction over
the next 12 months at 50 percent or higher, according to a poll
taken from Oct. 22 to Nov. 6. Just five of 46 held a similar
view in September.
The spillover from the biggest housing slump in 16 years,
turmoil in financial markets and higher energy prices will cause
growth to slow to an annual pace of 1.5 percent this quarter,
less than the survey participants previously forecast. More than
two-thirds of those polled said the chance of recession was at
least 25 percent.
``We are still going to edge by with a continuation of this
economic expansion,'' said Ellen Hughes-Cromwick, the group's
president and chief economist at Ford Motor Co., in an
interview.
The economy will expand 2.6 percent from now to next year's
fourth quarter, according to the survey. While that is lower
than September's forecast, it would still surpass the 2.4
percent projected for 2007.
The survey's median forecast for fourth-quarter growth
matched the projection in a Bloomberg News survey also taken
earlier this month. Many of the economists surveyed by NABE also
participated in the Bloomberg poll.
No Fed
The Fed will keep its benchmark overnight lending rate
between banks at 4.5 percent through the end of next year,
according to the NABE survey median. The forecast was ``not
unanimous,'' with projections ranging from 3.5 percent to 5
percent, the group said.
The next meeting of the Fed's policy-making Open Market
Committee is set for Dec. 11. The central bank lowered the
benchmark rate on overnight loans between banks for a second
month on Oct. 31 and said the reductions balanced the risks of
higher inflation and slower growth.
Fed Governor Randall Kroszner said Nov. 16 that policy
makers probably won't need to reduce interest rates further to
help the economy weather a ``rough patch'' in the coming year.
``The current stance of monetary policy should help the
economy get through the rough patch during the next year, with
growth then likely to return to its longer-run sustainable
rate,'' Kroszner said in a speech in New York. Data consistent
with such growth ``would not, by themselves, suggest to me that
the current stance of monetary policy is inappropriate.''
2008 Improvement
The economists polled by NABE projected growth would
strengthen through next year, capped by a 3 percent pace of
expansion in the last three months of 2008, according to the
survey median.
``I do not think there is any question that the forecasters
suggest that there is a dicey territory,'' Hughes-Cromwick said.
``But over all, they see the economy relatively resilient.''
The economists were most pessimistic about home
construction. Housing starts will fall to 1.2 million units next
year, from a projected 1.36 million in 2007, according to the
survey. Residential investment has subtracted from economic
growth every quarter since the first three months of 2006.
Survey participants also trimmed estimates for job and
profit growth. The unemployment rate probably will average 4.9
percent next year and after-tax profits will grow 4.7 percent,
the group forecast. In September, the economists had projected
an average jobless rate of 4.8 percent and a 5.6 percent
increase in profits.
To contact the report on this story:
Courtney Schlisserman in Washington
Cschlisserma@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: November 19, 2007 14:37 EST