Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, whose out-of-consensus views about the risks of persistent inflation have come true, is reiterating his concerns about a potential U.S. downturn: He now says a recession is “the most likely thing” partly because the Federal Reserve “is going to have to keep going [in its effort to subdue inflation] until we see disinflation.”
In an interview with Bloomberg Economics released on Thursday, Summers, a paid contributor to Bloomberg, said that “the odds on a hard landing within the next two years are certainly better than half, and quite possibly two-thirds or more.” One of the mechanisms that will bring about a recession is the central bank’s response to elevated inflation, Summers said, adding that “we’re not going to see disinflation back toward the target range until we see unemployment rise, meaningfully.”
The publication of Summers’s comments come just two days after the consumer price index data showed the annual headline U.S. inflation rate jumping to 8.5% in March, the highest level since 1981. The rate has remained well above the Fed’s 2% target for almost a year, putting central bankers under pressure to aggressively raise target lending rates. Expectations for higher rates are rippling out throughout the economy, with the average 30-year mortgage rate soaring to 5% for the first time in a decade. Meanwhile, financial-market participants continue to debate whether inflation has hit a peak.
“If you look at history, there has never been a moment when inflation was above 4% and unemployment was below 5% when we did not have a recession within the next two years,” Summers said, according to a Bloomberg transcript. “I don’t think the idea that is still embodied in Fed forecasts — that we could have continuing supertight labor markets at 3½% unemployment, and we could have inflation come down rapidly — is a terribly plausible one.”
Generally, economists appear to be coming around to the potential for a downturn: A Wall Street Journal survey of economists in April puts the odds of a recession in the next 12 months at 28%, up from 13% a year ago.
On Thursday, investors aggressively sold off Treasurys as they assessed the path forward on inflation, with yields rising across the board. The 10-year rate
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jumped above 2.8%, while the major U.S. stock indexes
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were mixed.