Survey: Recession odds for 2023 hover at 64% amid bank failures and higher rates
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The U.S. economy started the year off on a better foot than expected, but the chances of a recession are still high, according to Bankrate’s quarterly survey of economists.

The financial system has a 64 percent chance of contracting by the end of 2023, according to experts’ average forecast. Those odds remained the same from the prior survey period, even as businesses massively ramped up hiring since the last iteration of Bankrate’s Economic Indicator survey.

Predictions ranged from as high as 95 percent to a low of 30 percent. Just 18 percent of economists said the chances of a downturn were below 50 percent, while nearly half (or 47 percent) put the odds at 70 percent or higher. The forecasts signal that the odds of a recession are more probable than not.

Economists, however, indicated the U.S. economy’s surprising strength might be part of the problem. The Federal Reserve is now preparing to keep rates higher for longer to cure more stubborn inflation. That more restrictive policy is expected to weigh on growth and spending — and with the recent failure of two prominent regional banks thrown into the mix, none of it could bode well for the economy.

[sc code="block_quote" quote_text="While the odds of a recession have been seen as elevated for many months now, recent bank failures and the related flare-up of financial system instability are widely seen as raising the economy’s downside risks." source="Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate" image="https://www.bankrate.com/2023/03/17104056/mark-hamrick.jpeg"]

Key takeaways:

The U.S. economy looked stronger than expected in early 2023 — but then two bank failures spoiled the party

If the U.S. economy were to enter a recession, it’d likely be one of the most predicted downturns in history. Last July, experts penciled in a 52 percent chance of a downturn, while those odds surged to 65 percent by October 2022.

That’s likely because experts are using history as a guide. The last time the Fed raised interest rates this quickly, joblessness surged to nearly 11 percent, while the financial system entered the worst recession since the Great Depression.

The downturn, however, looks like it’s yet to arrive. Since the Fed’s first rate hike in March 2022, employers have added 4.3 million new jobs. Unemployment in January, meanwhile, hit a fresh half-century low of 3.4 percent. Businesses have a near record number of job openings, while the number of vacant positions outnumbers those who are unemployed by almost 1.7 to 1. Those recession odds have stalled out ever since in Bankrate’s subsequent Economic Indicator polls.