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Economic Outlook

Economic Outlook. William Strauss Senior Economist and Economic Advisor Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. NEW Manufacturing Alliance Appleton, WI March 5, 2012. The “Great Recession” ended in June 2009, but the economy expanded by just 1.6% over the past year.

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Economic Outlook

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  1. Economic Outlook • William Strauss • Senior Economist • and Economic Advisor • Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago NEW Manufacturing Alliance Appleton, WI March 5, 2012

  2. The “Great Recession” ended in June 2009,but the economy expanded by just 1.6% over the past year

  3. The Chicago Fed National Activity Index3-month average is just above zero

  4. The liabilities side of the Fed’s balance sheetshows large amount of excess reserves

  5. The personal savings rate has recently moved lower

  6. Existing home prices fell by over 30%

  7. The stock market has improved since March 2009,but remains well below previous levels

  8. GDP is forecast to grow near trend in 2012and slightly above trend in 2013

  9. The recovery has been led by theconsumer and business sectors

  10. The forecast path of the current recovery is relatively muted compared with past deep recession recovery cycles average annualized growth: 5.4% average annualized growth: 5.3% average annualized growth: 2.4%

  11. Employment fell by over 8.7 million jobsbetween December 2007 and February 2010,but it began to rise beginning in March 2010and added 1.95 million jobs over the past 12 months

  12. After peaking in October 2009,the unemployment rate has fallen by1.7 percentage points

  13. The unemployment rate is forecast to edge lower

  14. Unemployment rates have been movinglower in many states in the Midwest - however, Illinois’ unemployment rate hasincreased by 0.2 percentage points over the past year

  15. Inflation has risen

  16. In large part due to the movement of oil prices.However, adjusted for inflation,current oil prices are belowthe levels that existed thirty years ago

  17. Natural gas prices remain low

  18. Expenditures on energy arebelow the historical average

  19. Removing the volatile food and energy components from the PCE, “core” inflation remains low

  20. Inflation is anticipated to rise 2.0 percent this yearand 2.2 percent next year

  21. Industrial output in manufacturing fell quite sharplyduring the recession, but has risen strongly overthe past thirty-one months, averaging 6.5% and hasrecovered 68.9% of the loss during the recession

  22. Manufacturing capacity utilization has been rising since June 2009

  23. Declines in manufacturing output werebroad-based during the Great Recession –especially in primary metals and vehicle manufacturing

  24. The recovery has also been broad-based withprimary metals and automotive manufacturingleading the way

  25. The Chicago purchasing managers indexhas been significantly above the nation’s

  26. Midwest manufacturing has beenoutperforming the U.S. during the recovery

  27. Industrial production is forecast to rise at a solid pace

  28. Light vehicle sales have been improving following the2011 Tōhuku earthquake and tsunami

  29. New vehicle prices rose sharplyfollowing the Japanese disaster

  30. Increases in new domestic production sharehas offset losses in Detroit-3 market share

  31. Vehicle sales are expected to improve at a good pace

  32. Housing starts fell to a post WWII low

  33. The forecast calls for a very gradual recovery in housing

  34. Credit spreads between Corporate High Yield securitiesand Corporate Aaa securities have been edging lower

  35. Monetary policy has been very aggressive,keeping the Fed Funds near zero since December 2008

  36. The Federal Funds Rate is anticipated to remainvery low over the forecast horizon

  37. The asset side of the Fed’s balance sheethas expanded in size and in composition

  38. The Fed’s expansion of the monetary base has allowed the money supply to continue rising,compared with what took place during the 1930s

  39. Summary • The outlook is for the U.S. economy to expand at a • pace below trend this year and slightly above trend in 2013 • Employment is expected to rise moderately with the • unemployment rate edging lower • Slackness in the economy will lead to a relatively • contained inflation rate • Vehicle sales are anticipated to rise at a good pace • Growth in manufacturing output should be solid

  40. www.chicagofed.org www.federalreserve.gov

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