Bank Economists See Healthy U.S. Economic Growth Through 2015

Staff Report From Georgia CEO

Friday, February 5th, 2016

The U.S. economy will grow nearly 3 percent on an inflation-adjusted basis this year compared to 2.5 percent last year, according to the Economic Advisory Committee of the American Bankers Association.

The committee, which includes 15 chief economists from among the largest banks in North America, sees an improved fundamental backdrop for growth. Sectors that were severely damaged during the 2008-2009 crisis have healed significantly. In particular, the banking and real estate sectors are in much better health. Household balance sheets have also improved, with strong gains in asset prices and a dramatic drop in debt service burden.

The fiscal and monetary policy environment is supportive of growth. Fiscal policy is no longer a headwind as budget brinkmanship battles abate and tax and spending policies stabilize. The group forecasts the federal budget deficit will stabilize at $470 billion in fiscal year 2015.

The committee expects the Federal Reserve to maintain near-zero interest rates through mid-2015. Thereafter, the bank economists see a very gradual normalization of interest rates over the next several years. 

“We expect the Fed to calibrate its policy to minimize any shock to growth,” said Ethan Harris, chairman of the group and co-head of global economics research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. 

The group sees falling energy prices as a net positive for the economy. Low prices will hurt the oil patch, cutting into mining employment and capital spending. However, this will likely be more than offset by the boost to energy consumers.

"Gas at about $2 a gallon is like an across-the-board tax cut," said Harris. "Cash savings at the pump leave more money for consumers to save or spend elsewhere."

Despite the weakness in energy sector investment, the group sees business investment as a strong point for the economy. The consensus forecast is that business investment will rise 5 percent on an inflation-adjusted basis this year.

The Committee sees continued monthly job gains of 200,000 or higher through this year. However, the bank economists expressed concerns that job gains had not yet triggered healthy wage growth.

"Top earners have fared well since the last recession, but the same can't be said for middle and lower-income families," said Harris. "Wages have barely kept up with inflation over the last six years, straining household budgets."

Nonetheless, the Committee believes the ongoing drop in unemployment will start pushing wage growth higher.

"Solid job growth, improving wages and lower energy costs should encourage more families to spend," said Harris.  The Committee expects 3 percent real consumption growth in 2015.

The group expects residential investment to be stronger this year with gains in single and multi-family starts and home sales.  The EAC expects home prices nationally to rise 3.5 percent this year.

"With home prices on the rise, families are once again viewing homes as good investments," said Harris. "Even if mortgage interest rates rise some this year, more people are going to want to buy a first or larger home."

The group's consensus is that mortgage rates will rise only from about 4 percent now to 4.5 percent by year-end.

The group forecasts that consumer credit growth will be modest this year and business lending growth will be stronger, but will return to a more normal pace of growth.  In 2015 and 2016, loans to individuals are expected to grow about 6 percent and loans to businesses will grow about 10 percent.

"We're optimistic that business lending will grow at a double-digit rate this year to finance healthy business investment," said Harris.  "Stronger growth in business lending will be critical for the economy.  Banks are ready to meet demand as businesses take the next step forward."

The Committee sees low inflation resulting from falling energy prices, which will temporarily push year-over-year headline inflation into negative territory.

"Outside of energy, the improving domestic economy could put upward pressure on prices, but the weak global backdrop and a strong dollar should limit any inflation acceleration," said Harris.

The Committee believes the greatest near-term risks to the U.S. economy come from outside the country.

"Disappointing growth in Europe, China and Japan is a reminder that the global economy still faces major challenges,” said Harris.

The Committee also sees major long-run budget challenges.

"As the baby boom generation retires, the federal budget deficit will balloon again, posing a major challenge to future generations," said Harris.

Nonetheless, the Committee sees a generally positive U.S. economic outlook for 2015 with above-trend growth, low inflation and a go-slow Fed. 

The members of the 2015 ABA Economic Advisory Committee are:

  • EAC Chair Ethan S. Harris, co-head of global economics research, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, New York;

  • Scott A. Anderson, SVP and chief economist, Bank of the West, San Francisco;

  • Robert A. Dye, SVP and chief economist, Comerica Bank, Dallas;

  • Keith Hembre, chief economist and chief investment strategist, Nuveen Asset Management, and chief economist of US Bank, Minneapolis;

  • Stuart G. Hoffman, SVP and chief economist, PNC Financial Services Group, Pittsburgh;

  • Peter Hooper, managing director and chief economist, Deutsche Bank Securities Inc., New York;

  • Nathaniel Karp, EVP and chief economist, BBVA Compass, Houston;

  • Bruce C. Kasman, chief economist, JP Morgan Chase & Company, New York;

  • Christopher Low, chief economist, First Horizon National Corp’s FTN Financial, New York;

  • Gregory L. Miller, SVP and chief economist, SunTrust Banks, Inc., Atlanta;

  • George Mokrzan, SVP and director of economics, Huntington National Bank, Columbus, Ohio;

  • Richard F. Moody, SVP and chief economist, Regions Financial Corporation, Birmingham, Ala.;

  • Doug Porter, chief economist and managing director of economic research, BMO Financial Group; Toronto;

  • Christopher Probyn, managing director and chief economist, State Street Global Advisors, Boston, Mass.; and

  • Carl R. Tannenbaum, SVP and chief economist, Northern Trust, Chicago