U.S. Overview
The Recovery Is Beginning to Take Shape
We believe the recession ended around the middle of this year and that a recovery has begun to take hold. Real GDP is expected to rise at a 3.4 percent pace in the third quarter and average a 3.0 percent pace for the second half of this year. The improved outlook reflects recent revisions to the underlying GDP data and a sharp reduction in inventories. The initial success of the cash for clunkers trade-in program has also bolstered our outlook for consumer spending. Aside from these changes, our forecast remains close to its earlier track.
Private domestic demand is expected to remain weak throughout the first year of the recovery, averaging just a 1.0 percent pace. Consumer spending will be constrained by rising unemployment, sluggish income growth, declines in household wealth and higher taxes, particularly at the state and local level. Outlays for plant and equipment will also take some time to recover. Businesses are awash in excess capacity and continue to focus on strengthening their balance sheets. Commercial construction will be another drag on economic activity during the early part of the recovery but homebuilding appears set to make a slight positive contribution to growth.
The sluggish start to the economic recovery should allow the Federal Reserve to keep short-term interest rates on hold through the middle of next year. Once the risks of the economy backsliding have passed, the Fed will move quickly to bring the federal funds rate back to a neutral level.
International Overview
Rate Hikes Are Not Imminent in Most Countries
Economic data that have been generally stronger than expected in most countries recently have raised the specter of eventual monetary tightening. In our view, however, rate hikes are not just around the corner. The Bank of England recently announced an increase in the size of its asset purchase program, a form of unconventional monetary easing, to ensure that the economy, which is showing signs of stabilization, does not lurch lower again. Monetary tightening does not seem to be on the minds of most policymakers at the European Central Bank either due to sluggish growth at present or benign inflation. We expect that both the Bank of England and the ECB will maintain their policy rates at current levels well into next year.
If there is an area of the world in which monetary policy could conceivably be tightened, it would be Asia where many economies are clearly expanding again. Even in Asia, however, most central banks probably will keep policy rates unchanged for the foreseeable future. The region has extensive trade ties with the rest of the world, and policymakers in most Asian countries probably want to be assured that incipient recoveries in western economies are sustainable before they begin to take back policy support. Although Asian central banks likely will be the first to tighten policy, we think that the first rate hikes are still months in the future.







