U.S. economy should power through a contentious election cycle, top economist predicts

U.S. economy should power through a contentious election cycle, top economist predicts

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The presidential election remains a toss-up and so does the future control of Congress, which could swing to either party or remain divided.

“There’s a 70% chance that we soft land or do better,” El-Erian said, defining better as an economy that “gets bigger, but not hotter.”

A sharp rise in interest rates to combat inflation caused the U.S. mortgage industry in 2023 to suffer its worst year in 25 years, said Mike Fratantoni, chief economist with the MBA. Existing home sales have also slowed sharply, although from elevated levels.

But the larger economy has held up, defying numerous predictions of a recession, including some from El-Erian in 2022. The U.S. represents the “cleanest dirty shirt” in a global laundry basket of powerful but struggling economies like the U.K., the European Union and China, he said.

The U.S. economy has started to see rising productivity, an important measure of efficiency, after years of stagnation. Artificial intelligence technology should help accelerate that trend in the years ahead.

“We haven’t understood how powerful this technology was,” he said.

The U.S. economy has endured a “bumpy journey to a better destination,” he said, and it should eventually get there — provided major policy mistakes or troubles abroad don’t drag it down.

El-Erian said the risk of a recession, while moderated, hasn’t been eliminated and stands at around 30% for the U.S.

Lower-income households are under growing financial stress and they could pull back spending. Sluggish growth abroad could weigh on performance domestically.

A third trigger would be a policy mistake, either from the Federal Reserve as it combats inflation or by the next presidential administration.

El-Erian argued the Fed made a mistake in cutting the target on the federal funds rate that banks charge each other for overnight loans by 50 basis points last month, double the amount the markets had expected. Instead of bond and mortgage rates moving lower, the opposite happened after economic indicators came in stronger than expected.



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