What's ahead for the US economy and job growth? A peek at inflation, interest rates, more

The post-COVID-19 economy was finally supposed to stop defying gravity and topple into a recession this year.

Instead, the stock market is roaring on the growing belief that the Federal Reserve is on track to wrestle down inflation without causing a downturn, a rare feat known as a “soft landing.”

To be sure, growth is expected to slow amid the delayed effects of the Fed’s aggressive interest rate hikes, the depletion of households’ excess pandemic savings and a pullback in federal government spending.

But other factors are likely to keep the economy afloat, forecasters say, including near-record home and stock prices, a further easing of inflation to or near the Fed’s 2% goal and the central bank’s tentative plans to cut interest rates more sharply than previously anticipated.

“2023 was a very good year,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. “2024 will just be a good year.”

Will the Fed lower interest rates in 2024?

A flurry of developments in recent weeks has brightened the outlook. The Fed said it’s probably done hiking rates to fight inflation and is penciling in three rate cuts in 2024, a strategy that would lower borrowing costs for consumers and businesses. Inflation has slowed more dramatically than expected, validating the Fed’s turnabout.

And a stock market that was already surging on an improved inflation picture rocketed higher after the Fed’s pivot.

“It was like pouring gasoline on a fire that was already burning,” Scott Anderson, chief U.S. economist of BMO, wrote in a note to clients.

What will the economy be like in 2024?

Forecasters expect the economy to grow 1.3% this year, down from a projected 2.4% in 2023 but above their 0.7% estimate in July, according to a survey by Wolters Kluwer Blue Chip Economic Indicators. Meager gains in the first half of the year should give way to stronger output by fall as the Fed slices rates further, forecasters say.

The 3.7% unemployment rate – modestly above a 50-year low − is projected to rise to 4.2% by the end of 2024, well below economists’ 4.8% estimate a year ago.

Keep in mind the Wolters Kluwer poll was conducted in early December, before the Fed news on Dec. 13.

Some top economists have since revised their estimates. Richard Moody, chief economist of Regions Financial, has bumped up his GDP growth forecast to 1.9% from 1.6%. Zandi, who says he always believed inflation would retreat and the Fed would shift its stance, is sticking to his 1.8% prediction.

GDP growth of just under 2% is far from robust but it would be close to the decent 2% average in the decade before the pandemic. Normally, a big drop in inflation requires a dramatically cooling economy as softer consumer and business demand leads companies to lower prices and employees to accept smaller pay raises.