Nearly two years on from the short-lived 2020 recession, the US appears to
be at the midpoint of an economic cycle that should continue to see growth even
as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates to bring inflation under control,
National Retail Federation (NRF) chief economist Jack Kleinhenz says.
“The maturing economy remains in growth mode and there is good reason to
expect it will soon approach normal trends,” Kleinhenz adds. “Despite ongoing
challenges, we are clearly still in an expansion phase. The question is how
long it will last as policymakers strike a delicate balance between encouraging
growth and taming inflation.
“It is not clear how Fed policy will develop, and there will be indigestion
as we adjust to new policies. Nonetheless, both households and businesses are
“in good financial shape,” Covid-19 is having less of an impact on economic
activity “and there is plenty of room to raise rates without threatening the economy.”
Kleinhenz’s remarks came in the February issue of NRF’s Monthly Economic
Review, which said the economy “is running hotter than it has in a long time”
despite the end of federal intervention like stimulus cheques and expanded
unemployment benefits. The economy “is sturdy enough to stand on its own and
can sustain itself toward a growth environment without the pandemic stimulus
and monetary policy policies of the past two years,” the report noted.
Gross domestic product was up 5.7% in 2021 from 2020, the fastest growth for
any calendar year since 1984, and household spending continued to grow in the
fourth quarter even though not as quickly as earlier in the year. Kleinhenz
expects GDP to grow between 3-4 % in 2022, still faster than the 2.3% annual pace
during the 2009-2020 expansion that was ended by the pandemic.
The rapid increase in economic growth has come amid the highest inflation in
nearly 40 years, with the Consumer Price Index up 7% year-over-year as of
December, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In response, the Federal
Reserve said last week “it will soon be appropriate” to raise interest rates to
tighten the availability of credit and help bring inflation under control. Rate
hikes will make mortgages, car loans and other credit more expensive, but
“households are poised to spend” anyway, partly because of savings accumulated
during the pandemic, Kleinhenz says.
The recovery follows the brief-but-intense recession seen in early 2020,
which the National Bureau of Economic Research said lasted only from February
to April and was the shortest in US history. Kleinhenz says the “quick, deep
decline” followed by a “fast, steep recovery” amounted to an economic
“mini-cycle” in sharp contrast to normal economic cycles that have averaged about
five-and-a-half years of gradual shifts from expansion to recession and back
since the end of World War II.
Understanding economic cycles is important as policymakers consider
appropriate policy moves: “The key to extending the expansion is to balance growth,
inflation and interest rates,” Kleinhenz notes. “Clearly, this expansion is
different from the past, and the policy approach will be different.”
By Just Style