Waiting For U.S. Economy To Cry 'Uncle'

 | Apr 26, 2022 02:45PM ET

You can’t swing a cat without hitting a commentator discussing recession risk these days. And for good reason: there’s a growing list of potential threats to the economy. But forecasting a possible contraction in the future and monitoring events in real time are two different things and there’s always ambiguity about whether the two become one and the same. Hold that thought as we consider some of the evidence that while the potential for a new recession is lurking, the numbers published to date still indicate that the expansion is very much alive and kicking.

Let’s start with yesterday’s March update of the Chicago Fed National Activity Index (CFNAI), a broad measure of US economic conditions. The numbers are noisy in the short term and so there’s a case for minimizing the risk of false signals by measuring the trend on a rolling 3-month basis, which has proven to be a highly reliable proxy of the business cycle. By that standard, economic growth last month remained solid. CFNAI’s 3-month print rose to +0.57, a ten-month high. A reading above zero indicates above-average growth relative to the long-term trend. A recession reading for this indicator are values below -0.7. Translation: the risk of contraction was nil last month.