The Fed will hike rates too far and tip the global economy into a recession, survey of economists says
- The Fed is expected to hike rates too far and tip the global economy into a recession, according to Bloomberg's survey of economists.
- Three-quarters see a US recession within the next two years, and two-thirds see a global recession in that same timeframe.
- Economists also see the Fed lifting benchmark rates to 4.75%-5% by early 2023.
The Fed is expected to hike rates too far and tip the global economy into a recession, according to Bloomberg's survey of economists.
That comes amid expectations for another aggressive Fed rate hike next week, as central bankers scramble to get a lid on sky-high inflation.
The survey of 40 economists found that the Fed is widely expected to issue a fourth consecutive rate hike of 75 basis points Wednesday at the Federal Open Markets Committee meeting. It's expected to be followed by a half-point rate hike in December and two quarter-point increases in early 2023.
That would bringing the fed funds target range to 4.75% to 5% from the current rate of 3% to 3.25%.
The median prediction for the peak fed funds rate was 4.75% in Bloomberg's survey, although some saw the central bank hiking as high as 5% by March of next year.
Fed officials will be skittish about a pivoting monetary policy until inflation shows clear signs of easing, economists said.
That has raised concern that the hawkishness is going overboard, with 75% of surveyed economists seeing the Fed triggering a US recession within the next two years, and two-thirds expecting a global recession in that time.
Those grim forecasts echo that of other market doomsayers, who have been warning investors of a severe recession and potential financial crisis underway.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon predicted earlier this month that the US could spiral into a downturn over the next six to nine months.
Top economist Nouriel Roubini warned that persistent inflation and growing debt put the US at risk for a stagflationary debt crisis, which would slam the US with a macro storm "unlike anything we've ever seen."
Contributer : Business Insider https://ift.tt/tETSLza
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