The U.S. hasn't dodged a recession (yet). But these signs point to a soft landing.

For nearly two years, forecasters have hoped the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes would slow the economy enough to bring down inflation without causing a recession.

This week, that rare feat, known as a soft landing, appeared to shift from a possibility to a likely scenario. Although recession risks are still historically high, it's a change from last year, when a soft landing seemed to be little more than a pipe dream.

Here are the encouraging developments that some economists highlighted:

Is the Fed cutting rates in 2024?

First, Fed Chair Jerome Powell unexpectedly said Wednesday the central bank is probably done raising interest rates now that inflation is coming down more swiftly, and Powell and his colleagues forecast three rate cuts next year, more than anticipated. That means the Fed is no longer focused solely on fighting inflation and will devote at least as much firepower to supporting economic growth.

Put another way, an economy that the Fed was feeding Ambien will likely be receiving several B-12 shots.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference

The news further stoked a strong market rally from the past six weeks, with the S&P 500 index rising another 1.6% since the Fed announcement. The rally itself, if it continues, is another reason recession odds are falling.

Meanwhile, fresh data show inflation is falling faster than economists projected.

And another report underscored that consumer spending – which makes up 70% of economic activity – continues to hold up despite still high inflation and interest rates.

What is the probability of a recession right now?

Barclays has been predicting a mild recession next year but Jonathan Millar, the research firm’s senior economist, is no longer worried about the threat.

“The economy continues to power forward, inflation has come down” and the Fed is poised to lower rates, Millar says. “At this point, there’s no reason to write down a recession” in the forecast.

After the Fed news, Gregory Daco, chief economist of EY-Parthenon, says he lowered his recession odds from 50% to about 40%.

A soft landing is far from certain. The Fed will need to continue to walk a tightrope to achieve it. And with the economy expected to slow significantly next year, some analysts are still predicting a mild recession.

The Fed expects the economy to grow a tepid 1.4% in 2024, down from 2.6% this year.

“We’re not completely out of the woods,” says Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist of Nationwide.

Still, here’s why the odds that the U.S. can avoid a slump climbed this week.

The Fed pivot

After raising its key interest from near zero to a range of 5.25% to 5.5% since early last year -- the most aggressive such campaign in 40 years – the Fed now says it foresees lowering the rate by three-quarters of a point next year. That, of course, depends on how the economy and inflation evolve.