Judging solely by the U.S. stock market, economic conditions could hardly be any better. Year to date, the S&P 500 is up more than 22%. Investors may be taking their cues from economic data suggesting a desirable “Goldilocks economy,” one that is neither too cold nor too hot. Economists forecast U.S. Gross Domestic Product to be up about 2.5% for 2024. Inflation has been gradually ebbing.
Underlying statistics paint a murkier picture. Manufacturing has been in a recession for most of the past two years, and new factory orders continued to decline in August. The Institute for Supply Management’s Purchasing Managers Index showed continued contraction into September. The weakness is largely due to high interest rates that reduce demand for big-ticket consumer and industrial goods like cars, appliances, and factory machinery. The Federal Reserve’s goal in hiking interest rates in recent years was to slow down the economy by making large items more expensive to finance. Demand for services, about 80 percent of the economy, continues to rise steadily.
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