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Is a recession on the way? What data says about the economy

Sky high inflation. Rising interest rates. Falling home purchases.

Analysts are working to digest a host of signals about the state of the U.S. economy, which emerged from a pandemic recession stronger than anyone could have believed.

This week, those alarming trends collided with another major data point showing U.S. gross domestic product shrank in the first quarter of 2022.

Still, many economists believe a formal recession — the economy going into reverse for two consecutive quarters — is not imminent.

"This is noise; not signal," wrote Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics research group, of the GDP data in a note to clients. "The economy is not falling into recession."

That sentiment was echoed by Bill Adams, chief economist at Comerica Bank, who noted in a tweet that consumer spending, investment and job growth remain healthy.

Still, many Americans are feeling jittery. Among the signs: searches for "recession" have been spiking on Google this month.

Google trend data showing searches for “recession” surging in April (Google)
Google trend data showing searches for “recession” surging in April (Google)

"There are undoubtedly a lot of challenges for the U.S. economy," said James Knightley, chief international economist at the financial services group ING. "You've got a situation where households are feeling the squeeze of higher fuel and food costs, and wages that are not necessarily keeping pace."

Recent consumer sentiment readings also suggest many Americans aren't sure where their financial futures are headed. Complicating matters: The ultra-low interest rate environment that has dominated the U.S. economy for years has come to an end, with the Federal Reserve poised to hike its key benchmark rate next week for the second time in nearly two months.

As a result, while most economists are certain that growth will begin slowing in the coming months, there is debate about how severe the drop will be, and what it all means for average Americans.

"People are feeling cautious — and we've just started to get higher interest rates," Knightley said. "It’s unnerving for people."

Warning signals

On Wednesday, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis reported the U.S. gross domestic product, among the broadest measures of growth observed by economists, shrank 1.4 percent. GDP represents the market value of goods and services produced in a country during a specific period of time.

Yet many economists were unfazed by the negative direction of the data, saying it was mostly a quirk of technical factors in how GDP is calculated.

In particular, the data were heavily affected by a surge in imported goods — a sign that demand actually remains quite strong.

"Because there was such a huge backlog of ships waiting to unload in American ports, imports stayed high in the first quarter," Comerica's Bill Adams said, meaning America was in a trade deficit. "So it showed up as a reduction in GDP, which meant purchasers were going to buy more foreign products and less American products."