Myths and Reality

Soft landing is at hand for the world’s major economies

A once-mythical soft landing is at hand for the world’s major economies. The global expansion has remained resilient, withstanding restrictive monetary policy along with a host of geopolitical frictions. Inflation has been retreating, and employment levels remain very high. Equity markets have been especially strong.

That said, the mythology surrounding the incoming American government is an important factor in the outlook. The unstable nature of ongoing regional conflicts and the uncertain future of international commerce under the Trump administration could threaten performance in major world economies. Inflationary policy changes could add to sticky underlying price pressures and prevent a faster return to neutral monetary policy.

Following are our thoughts on how top areas are faring.

United States

  • The U.S. economy performed well in the third quarter, with real gross domestic product (GDP) growing at 2.8% annualized pace. Consumers remain the main engine of growth. While much attention is focused on the economic consequences of the U.S. election, significantly altering our forecast at this time would be speculative. Inauguration is two months away; policies will take time to craft and enact; it may be a while before new measures become evident in the data. We believe the prospects for the soft landing are still favorable.

  • The Fed’s policy rate remains sufficiently restrictive to justify continued interest rate cuts. But given the risks arising from tighter immigration policy, higher tariffs and the outlook for a prolonged fiscal imbalance, we now see the Fed taking a less urgent course of easing. The high level of interest rates may invite comment from the incoming administration, as it did prior to the pandemic.