Why a ‘No Landing’ Scenario Is Just a Pipe Dream for the U.S. Economy

 | Mar 02, 2023 01:00

As if the 2020s haven’t been strange enough, the United States military recently shot down several UFOs. Equally bizarre as the possibility of aliens, some investment analysts are projecting an economic "no landing" scenario. They believe economic activity will easily absorb significant headwinds and chug along.

The last few years have been humbling for economists, the Fed, and investment professionals. In late 2021 no one expected the Fed would raise rates by over 4% within a year and inflation would approach levels last seen 40 years ago. In hindsight, had we or any economist foreseen the future, a recession prediction would have been appropriate. Such has yet to happen, but that doesn’t mean a recession won’t happen. Unfortunately, current monetary policy all but ensures the economic cycle will play out as it always does.

While the economy may seem unpredictable, the economic future is predictable. The "no landing" scenario assumes economic cycles have ceased to exist. The economic cycle is alive and well. But timing its ups and downs with unprecedented amounts of fiscal and monetary stimulus still flowing through the economy and markets is proving incredibly challenging.

What is a 'No Landing' Scenario/h2

Unlike a soft landing that envisions the Fed action’s dampening economic growth, the "no landing" scenario believes the economy will continue to grow at or above the trend growth rate. Such optimism assumes that the Fed’s restrictive monetary policy will not cause the economy to stumble.

GDP, as graphed below, in dollar terms (orange line), paints the picture of an economy constantly growing and essentially free of cycles. However, viewing annual growth rates (blue line) and the trend (dotted blue line), we find that GDP cycles regularly, and the growth trend is steadily declining. To forecast a "no landing" means you believe the blue GDP growth rate line will flatten and stay linear.

That did occur, to a degree, following the financial crisis (2010-2018), but the Fed pegged interest rates to zero and resorted to multiple rounds of QE at the first sign of trouble. The monetary conditions during that "no landing" period versus the current period are polar opposites.