US economic outlook March 2024 (2024)

Cutting through the noise

Outlook: There are many misleading macroeconomic narratives, ranging from a reaccelerating US economy reigniting inflationary pressures to entrenched inflation pressures that will force the Fed to tighten monetary policy and precipitate a recession. The reality is that there is no evidence that the economy is reaccelerating, or that inflation is picking up, or that inflation has become entrenched, or even that the Fed is about to tighten policy.

Cutting through the noise, the US economy is gradually decelerating due to more scrutinous consumers and business leaders in a high-cost (not elevated inflation) and high-interest-rate environment. Residential activity will likely remain constrained by historically low affordability, even if construction will be supported by deficient housing supply. Inventory rightsizing will continue amid slower demand growth and efforts to maintain supply resilience. Net trade will detract from growth in 2024 with the US continuing to outperform its peers. Government spending will become less of a tailwind, but healthy state and local finances should prevent a sharp pullback. Following a robust 2.5% advance last year, we foresee real GDP growing 2.3% in 2024, and 1.7% in 2025.

Cooling labor demand. The February jobs report sent mixed signals, but it was much less noisy than the January one. Nonfarm payrolls rose by a healthy 275,000 jobs, but employment gains in December and January were revised down by a cumulative 167,000 jobs and the unemployment rate rose to a two-year high of 3.9%. Importantly, the robust employment momentum is non-inflationary, with wage growth cooling 0.1 percentage point (ppt) to 4.3% year over year (y/y). We anticipate labor demand will soften in the form of reduced hiring, strategic resizing decisions and wage growth compression. Still, strong immigration flows should support labor force growth as the unemployment rate rises toward 4.2% by year-end.

Cautious consumers. Consumers remained cautious in February, with retail sales rebounding less than expected following their January plunge. The inflation-adjusted picture makes clear that consumers are exercising more scrutiny with their outlays. With employment and household income growth softening, costs remaining elevated and interest rates only gradually easing, consumer spending is expected to grow a more modest but still respectable 2.0% in 2024.

Gradual disinflation. Headline and core Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.4% month over month (m/m) in February, as expected, reflecting higher energy prices, a slight uptick in core goods prices, persistent shelter cost inflation and a notable boost in airfare. Headline CPI inflation ticked up to 3.15% y/y, while core CPI inflation eased 0.1ppt to 3.75% — its lowest since April 2021. We have revised our headline and core CPI inflation forecast up to around 2.5% and 2.7% y/y in Q4 2024 following the noisy January and February readings. The Fed’s favored inflation gauge, the deflator for personal consumption expenditures, should end the year around 2.2% y/y.

Measured Fed easing. The Federal Reserve kept the federal funds rate unchanged at 5.25%–5.50% at the March Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. The policy statement was largely unchanged, the dot plot continued to show three rate cuts in 2024 and GDP growth projections were revised up without a commensurate upgrade to inflation and employment, signaling a belief in non-inflationary growth supported by stronger productivity. Fed Chair Jerome Powell noted that the stronger-than-expected inflation readings in January and February were more noise than signal, and he reiterated that it would likely be appropriate to start easing policy at some point this year. We continue to expect the onset of the Fed easing cycle in June and believe the Fed is more likely to proceed with three rate cuts in 2024, rather than four as we had previously anticipated.

Risks to monitor. We see two prominent downside risks heading into 2024. The first risk stems from a resurgence in inflation from an oil price spike, tariffs or supply chain distress. The second risk stems from a further rise in interest rates from tighter monetary policy or fiscal sustainability concerns, leading to tighter financial conditions and private sector activity retrenching. The main upside risk stems from non-inflationary growth supported by a robust labor market and stronger productivity growth from efficiency improvements and generative AI (GenAI).

US economic outlook March 2024 (2024)

FAQs

US economic outlook March 2024? ›

Net trade will detract from growth in 2024 with the US continuing to outperform its peers. Government spending will become less of a tailwind, but healthy state and local finances should prevent a sharp pullback. Following a robust 2.5% advance last year, we foresee real GDP growing 2.3% in 2024, and 1.7% in 2025.

What is the prediction of the US economy in 2024? ›

The US economy's ongoing normalization has progressed further through the second quarter. Amid healthy consumer fundamentals, we have revised up our GDP forecast for 2024 by 30 basis points (bp) to 2.5%, and for 2025 by 20 bp to 2.1%.

How is the economy in March 2024? ›

Consumption continues to be resilient, except in Europe; central banks hold interest rates steady due to ongoing inflation risk; business survey respondents show increased confidence in economy.

What is the Federal Reserve outlook for 2024? ›

June 2024 Fed meeting: Fed maintains current policy rate and sees only one rate cut in 2024. The Federal Reserve left rates unchanged for the seventh consecutive meeting and now envisions only one rate cut in 2024. Read more about the implications of the Fed's latest decision.

What is the inflation rate for March 2024? ›

The March 2024 Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) report marked a third consecutive 0.4% month-over-month (MoM) increase. On a year-over-year (YoY) basis, inflation rose by a stronger-than-expected 3.5% in March, an uptick from the 3.2% YoY rise in February.

Will prices ever go down in 2024? ›

The PCE Index is projected to fall to 2.1% by fourth-quarter 2024, averaging 2.3% for the year. Supply chain improvements and falling housing prices have yet to be fully reflected in inflation numbers. Average inflation from 2024 to 2028 should dip just under the Federal Reserve's 2.0% inflation target.

What is the stock market prediction for 2024? ›

Overall, Yardeni Research forecasts S&P 500 operating earnings at $250 in 2024, up 12% vs 2023. He puts them at $270 in 2025 (up 8%) and $300 in 2026 (up 11.1%). These figures compare with analysts' consensus forecasts of $244.70 in 2024, $279.70 in 2025 and $314.80 in 2026.

What is the state of the US economy in April 2024? ›

The U.S. goods and services trade deficit increased in April 2024 according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and the U.S. Census Bureau. The deficit increased from $68.6 billion in March (revised) to $74.6 billion in April, as imports increased more than exports.

What is the Vanguard outlook for 2024? ›

We foresee GDP growth remaining below trend in 2024 amid restrictive monetary policy, though U.S. demand remains supportive. We expect inflation to continue its deceleration toward the higher end of the 2%–4% target range set by the Bank of Mexico (Banxico) as services inflation remains sticky.

What did the Fed announce in March 2024? ›

The Federal Reserve (Fed) announced at its March 2024 meeting that it would maintain the overnight federal funds rate at the current range of 5.25% to 5.5%.

Will interest rates go down in 2024? ›

The good news: With the U.S. Federal Reserve widely expected to begin cutting its benchmark interest rate in 2024, mortgage rates could drop as well—at least slightly.

What is the dot plot for March 20 2024? ›

What Does the March 2024 Fed Dot Plot Say? On March 20, 2024, the FOMC left the target fed funds rate unchanged at 5.25% to 5.50%. In Figure 3, we show the March 20, 2024 target fed funds rate in the black rectangle.

What is the CPI for the month of March 2024? ›

CPI for the months of January, February and March 2024 are 5.10, 5.09 and 4.85 respectively.

What is the CPI expectation for April 2024? ›

The April 2024 Consumer Price Index (CPI) for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) rose by a softer-than-expected 3.4% year-over-year (YOY). This marks a deceleration from a 3.5% YoY rise in March and the first-time inflation has cooled this year.

What will the US economy look like in 2025? ›

By 2025Q2, quarterly real GDP growth rebound above the 2.0 percent pace, owing to a healthy gain in nonresidential fixed investment and the recovery of consumption. Calendar-year GDP growth registers 2.5 percent again in 2024 and notches down to 1.9 percent in 2025.

What is the inflation forecast for 2024? ›

On the basis of these inflation forecasts, average consumer price inflation should be 3.1% in 2024 and 2.0% in 2025, compared to 4.06% in 2023 and 9.59% in 2022.

Will the job market get better in 2024? ›

As you can see, the 2024 job market is expected to experience some positive shifts, however, there are a few industries that will need to stay on their toes in order to keep that competitive edge that will help them stay afloat. Job seekers in industries experiencing hiring declines will need to do the same.

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