Trump's re-election in jeopardy, economy set for recession in 2020

Trump

Trump: delays by 2 weeks mass deportation of millions of 'illegal immigrants'

Trump: Recession predicted for US economy in 2020 as he seeks re-election

President Donald Trump’s re-election hopes in 2020 are in jeopardy as a business economic survey released Monday showed that the odds of a US recession by next year are on the upswing, with mounting protectionism continuing to pose the greatest economic threat.

Trump will declare his re-election bid on June 18 in Orlando, Florida. But with news from the economic front not looking pretty good, his chances will be affected.

Nearly all the respondents to the quarterly survey from the National Association for Business Economics predicted growth would slow in 2019 but were moderately less gloomy about the risks to their outlook.

However, the poll of 53 economic forecasters from major US corporations and universities was conducted in the first half of May, just as US trade relations with China took a sudden turn for the worse but before US President Donald Trump’s latest threat to impose new tariffs on Mexico in a dispute over migration starting at five percent and quickly increasing to 25 percent.

“Increased trade protectionism is considered the primary downside risk to growth by a majority of respondents, followed by financial market strains and a global growth slowdown,” Gregory Daco of Oxford Economics, who chaired the survey, said in the report.

Related News

“Recession risks are perceived to be low in the near term but to rise rapidly in 2020.”

The panelists put the odds at 60 percent for a US recession before the end of 2020 — nearly double the 35 percent forecast in the survey three months ago.

Nearly 90 percent of respondents said they had cut their growth forecasts in recent months due to US trade policy, which has involved battles with all major US trading partners, but even so the overall consensus for this year and next are a bit higher than the last survey.

Panelists now expect GDP growth to fall to 2.6 percent this year and 2.1 percent by next year, from 2.9 percent at the end of 2018.

Most, or 60 percent, said the balance of risks was weighted to the downside but this was down from 74 percent in the previous survey.

Load more