U.S. Economic Resilience and How Long It Will Last

 | May 31, 2023 07:57AM ET

The warning signs continue to mount. Yet the US economy continues to defy expectations in some quarters that a recession is near. Granted, it’s arguably a precarious expansion that’s vulnerable on several fronts. But for the moment, in the face of seemingly overwhelming odds, a positive macro trend endures, and that looks set to continue.

A broad review of business-cycle indicators suggests that recession risk remains low for the immediate future, which is to say, the next one to three months. There’s no guarantee, of course – there never is with economic forecasting. But looking ahead into the very near term is relatively reliable when it’s based on drawing on the latest trend behavior from a range of indicators. All the more so when they’re telling a similar story.

For example, aggregating several business-cycle benchmarks and running the numbers through a probit model continues to indicate a low probability that an NBER-defined recession has started. The Composite Recession Probability Index (CRPI), featured in the weekly updates of The US Business Cycle Risk Report, continues to estimate the probability of contraction at under 20%.